Excavations reveal red color ruled fashion world 15,000 years ago
November 27th, 2008 - 3:24 pm ICT by ANINew Delhi, Nov 27 (ANI): Archaeologists have found evidence in recent excavations in China that suggest the color red could have been used in clothing 15,000 years ago.
The archaeological team, led by Li Zhanyang, a researcher with Henan Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology, did the excavation on lake-based ruins in Xuchang, central Chinas Henan Province.
According to Li, their excavation team found from the soil strata dating back 15,000 years, or the late Paleolithic Era, more than 20 pieces of hematite, one of iron oxides commonly used as a dyestuff.
Three dozen thin instruments made of animal tooth enamel, plus seven needles made of the upper cheek tooth enamel of a rhinoceros sub-species now extinct, were also found.
It is the first time in China that iron oxide of such high concentration has been excavated from the ruins of the late Paleolithic Era, claimed Li.
Through excavation, we are confident that these hematite were deliberately brought to the Xuchang ruins from afar by ancient people, as Xuchang does not produce such minerals, said Li.
The ruins used to be the location of a lake where activities such as clothes making, food preparing, water drinking were clustered, according to Li.
I believe the people who lived there might have used hematite to dye clothes, which was quite different from Upper Cave Man at Zhoukoudian of Beijing who used hematite as a sacrifice to the dead, or from Europe, where ancient people there used hematite to draw cave murals, he added.
Li said that lab work proved the thin instruments made of animal tooth enamel might have be used as articles similar to buttons in present times.
There has been evidence suggesting people dating back 15,000 years could have made advanced fur apparel. If that is true, the most popular color might have been red, said the Chinese archaeologist. (ANI)
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Tags: archaeological team, archaeologists, cave man, chinas, cultural relics, excavation team, excavations, fashion world, fur apparel, hematite, iron oxide, iron oxides, murals, paleolithic era, present times, provincial institute, rhinoceros, time in china, tooth enamel, zhoukoudian