The walls around the ancient city of Loulan collapsed in many places, leaving only intermittent walls standing alone. The urban area is square, with an area of about100000 square meters. The panoramic view of Loulan site is broad and dignified, and the dilapidated architectural relics in the city are lifeless, which is particularly desolate and tragic.
Overlooking the ancient city of Loulan, there is a beacon tower in the northeast corner of the city. Although it has been repaired in different periods, we can still see the earliest architectural style in Han Dynasty. Southwest of beacon tower is the site of "Three Rooms". This 100 square meter house is built on a high platform, and the middle of the three rooms is wider than the east and west rooms. At the beginning of the 20th century, Sven Hedin excavated a large number of documents in a room in the east. Judging from the big wooden frame left by the west wing of the three rooms, it was once the location of the reclamation office in the city. Continue to the west, it is a big house. In the yard, there are three horizontally arranged houses in the north and south. In the ancient city, this kind of quadrangle building is also relatively ostentatious. In contrast, most of the houses in the south of the mansion are single rooms, short, scattered and shabby. According to the unearthed documents, it is speculated that the frame structure houses adjacent to the three rooms are the official relics of Loulan ancient city.
Loulan was a powerful tribe in the Western Regions in Han Dynasty. They live in the eastern part of Taklimakan Desert in Xinjiang, on the northwest edge of Lop Nur. The capital of Loulan people is the famous ancient city of Loulan. According to records, Loulan was a prosperous country on the Silk Road at that time, with harmonious government, prosperous economy and abundant products. In BC 108, Loulan surrendered to the Han Dynasty and paid tribute to Korea year after year, becoming the confidant of the Han Dynasty at that time.
The ancient city of Loulan was once a paradise for people to live and multiply. It is surrounded by a vast Lop Nur, in front of which is a clear river. People row boats on the blue waves and hunt in the dense Populus euphratica forest. People are bathed in the gifts of nature. According to the Water Classic Note, after the Eastern Han Dynasty, Loulan was seriously short of water because of the diversion of water injection along the middle reaches of Tarim River. Soller of Dunhuang led 65,438+10,000 soldiers to Loulan, and summoned 3,000 soldiers from Shanshan, Yanqi and Qiuci to cross the river day and night to divert water into Loulan, thus alleviating the water shortage in Loulan. However, after that, despite Loulan people's best efforts and attempts to dredge the river, the ancient city of Loulan was eventually abandoned because of lack of water.
The mystery of loulan's disappearance
1900 In March, the Swedish explorer Sven Hedin traveled eastward along the Tarim River and reached the lower reaches of the Peacock River in search of the elusive Lop Nur. On March 27th, the expedition arrived at a mound. At this time, something bad happened. Sven Hedin found that the water they brought was leaking a lot. In the arid desert, no water equals death. They went to find water, and an incredible scene happened. An ancient city appeared in front of them: there were walls, streets, houses and even beacon towers.
Sven Hedin excavated a large number of cultural relics here, including coins, silk, grains, pottery, 36 pieces of Chinese character paper, 120 pieces of bamboo slips and several writing brushes. ...
After Sven Hedin returned to China, he handed the cultural relics to Himmler for identification. After identification, this ancient city is the famous ancient country Loulan that shocked the whole world. Subsequently, expeditions from many countries followed ... With the long-term unremitting efforts of historians and cultural relics experts, the mysterious veil of Loulan ancient country was unveiled.
From 65438 to 0979, Xinjiang Institute of Archaeology organized the Loulan Archaeological Team and began to investigate the Loulan Ancient Road. In the lower reaches of Peacock River leading to Loulan Road, the archaeological team found a large number of ancient tombs. Several of the tombs have strange and spectacular shapes: the tombs are surrounded by seven layers of thin and thick logs, and rows of trees spread radially in all directions outside the circle. The whole shape is like a big sun, which makes people have all kinds of mysterious associations. What does it mean? It's still an unsolved mystery.
Statement 1: Loulan disappeared in the war. After the 5th century A.D., the kingdom of Loulan began to weaken, the northern powers invaded, the city of Loulan was broken and then abandoned.
Statement 2: Loulan declined due to drought and water shortage and ecological deterioration, and the upper reaches of the river were cut off and diverted, so people had to leave Loulan. Loulan promulgated the world's earliest environmental protection law discovered so far.
Statement 3: The disappearance of Loulan is related to the north-south migration of Lop Nur. Sven Hedin thinks that the time of the north-south migration of Lop Nur is about 1500 years. More than 3,000 years ago, there lived a European ethnic tribe in Loulan area. Loulan once again entered a prosperous era more than 1500 years ago, which was directly related to the wandering of Lop Nur.
Statement 4: The disappearance of Loulan is related to the opening of the North Road of the Silk Road. After the opening of the Silk Road North Road through Hami (Yiwu) and Turpan, the ancient Silk Road Desert Road through Loulan was abandoned, and Loulan lost its former glory.
Statement 5: Loulan was destroyed by the plague. A plague from other places claimed the lives of nine of the ten residents in Loulan City. Those who survived by luck fled Loulan and fled other places.
Statement 6: Loulan was defeated by biological invasion. An insect introduced from the two river basins has no natural enemies in Loulan, lives in the soil, can live in the albic soil in Loulan area, and enters the houses in droves. People can't destroy them and have to give up the city.
Loulan Ancient Country in History
According to Biography of Dawan in Historical Records and Biography of the Western Regions in Hanshu, as early as the 2nd century AD, Loulan was a famous "walled country" in the western regions. Dunhuang in the east, Yanqi and Yuli in the northwest, Ruoqiang and Qiemo in the southwest. The north-south road of the ancient Silk Road diverged from Loulan.
Office of Chief Historian of Western Regions in Wei, Jin and Liang Qian Period of China. Located in the northwest of Lop Nur, Xinjiang. It is named after the Chinese documents unearthed in the site, and is called "Kulolaina" as opposed to "Loulan" and "Lu Luwen". At the beginning of the 20th century, British Stein and others came here many times to steal and dig. After 1950s, China scholars made investigations and excavations.
Loulan is one of the 36 countries in the Western Regions, bordering Dunhuang and closely related to the Han Dynasty around A.D. The records of Loulan in ancient times are based on the Records of Hanshu Biography of the Western Regions, Faxian and Xuanzang. "Records of the Western Regions" records: "Shanshan Kingdom, whose real name is Loulan, Wang Zhi Qianni City, goes to Yangguan for 1,600 miles and Chang 'an for 6,100 miles. 1570 households, 4.4 1 10,000 people. Fa Xian said: "This land is rugged and barren. The layman's clothes are the same as those of Han, but the carpet is different in brown. Its king obeys the law. There are more than 4,000 monks who know Hinayana Buddhism. " At the end of the trip, Genjyo Sanzo made a simple explanation: "Since then, he has traveled more than 1,000 miles to the northeast, and came to the old country, that is, the land of Loulan. "
Loulan State in Han Dynasty sometimes became the eyes and ears of Xiongnu, and sometimes belonged to Han, playing with the policy of two-faced, and skillfully maintaining its political life between Han and Xiongnu. Because Loulan is located in the transportation hub between Han and the western countries, Han can't cross this area to fight Xiongnu, and Xiongnu can't threaten the Han Dynasty under the guise of Loulan's strength. Both Han and Xiongnu vigorously pursued the policy of softening Loulan.
Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty sent Bo Wanghou Zhang Qian to Da Yueshi, but failed to conclude an offensive and defensive alliance. Later, he sent troops to crusade against the distant kingdom of Dawan and sent envoys to western countries many times. When these messengers passed through Loulan, Loulan was overwhelmed and even killed the messengers. Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty finally sent troops to crusade against Loulan. As a result, as evidence of surrender, Prince Loulan was sent to the Han Dynasty as a hostage. Loulan also sent a prince to Xiongnu, saying that he was strictly neutral between Xiongnu and Han. Since then, when the Han Expeditionary Force attacked a vassal state of Xiongnu, King Loulan married Xiongnu and set an ambush in China, which angered the Han court. Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty once again sent troops to crusade against Loulan, forcing the capital to stand in a mud city. King Loulan was frightened and immediately opened the city gate to apologize. Emperor Wu asked him to monitor the movement of Xiongnu. In 92 BC, King Loulan died, and the prince who was taken hostage in the Han Dynasty returned to the throne. The prince was very sad and didn't want to return to China easily. His younger brother succeeded to the throne. The new king died not long ago, and the Huns took this opportunity to inherit the throne with the former eldest son who was taken hostage in their own country. Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty was shocked when he heard the news. He quickly sent messengers to persuade the newly established king to come to the Han court to hold him hostage, but he failed. In the next two or three years, there was no major incident between Han and Xiongnu, which was apparently stable. Loulan border is close to Yumen Pass, and China's envoys often travel to western countries through this closed door, passing through the desert named Bailongdui in Loulan. There is often wind in the desert. The wind throws quicksand into the air like a dragon, which makes pedestrians lose their way. The Han Dynasty constantly ordered Loulan Kingdom to provide guides and drinking water. As China's envoy insulted the guide many times, Loulan refused to obey their orders, and their relationship deteriorated. Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty finally sent an assassin to assassinate the new king. In order to marry the prince who was kidnapped in the Han Dynasty, a Maggie was sent back to Loulan to inherit the throne. But the king was afraid of being assassinated. Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty sent troops to Tunloulan in the name of protecting the king, thus gaining the initiative to crusade against Xiongnu and other western countries. The above is the relationship between Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty and Loulan. Since then, the influence of the Han dynasty has weakened, and Loulan has fought back again. .
Mystery of Loulan Ancient City
Xinjiang is an attractive place for adventure tourists. This mysterious ancient city, known as "Pompeii in the desert", is Loulan, an ancient country in the western regions.
Guloulan is located in the west bank of Lop Nur, Ruoqiang County, Bayinguoleng Mongolian Autonomous Prefecture, Xinjiang, and is one of the most desolate areas in Xinjiang. How fascinating the long history and fables here are; It mysteriously disappeared on the earth and unexpectedly appeared, which aroused the interest of many people-many Chinese and foreign tourists and explorers took pains to travel westward along the Silk Road to witness this famous historical and cultural city-Guloulan. From June 65438 to1October 65438, 979, the late scientist Peng of China set out from the north bank of Peacock River and walked across the desert to visit the Loulan site.
Loulan is a hub on the Silk Road and an important center of Sino-Western trade in history. Sima Qian once recorded in "Historical Records": "Loulan, Gushi City has a city wall, near salt." This is the first record of Loulan City in literature. In the Western Han Dynasty, the total population of Loulan was14,000, with business trips, lively markets, clean streets and magnificent Buddhist temples and pagodas. However, the Huns were powerful at that time, and Loulan was once controlled by them. They attacked and killed envoys of the Han Dynasty and robbed businessmen. Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty sent troops to break it, captured King Loulan alive and forced him to attach himself to the Han Dynasty. However, Loulan listened to the treachery of the Huns and stopped and killed Han officials many times. In the fourth year of Han Yuanfeng (77 BC), General Huo Guang sent Fu Jiezi to take some warriors to Loulan, designed and killed the king of Loulan, made a taste of his younger brother, changed his name to Shanshan, and moved his capital to the south. However, in the Han Dynasty, the management of Loulan was not relaxed, and Loulan was still very prosperous.
After the Eastern Jin Dynasty, the Central Plains became independent, and wars continued, and Loulan gradually lost contact with the Central Plains. The Central Plains was strong in the Tang Dynasty, and the Tang Dynasty and Tubo met many times in Loulan. "Tianshan five In the snow, no flowers only cold. Spring can only be imagined in the flute "Folding Willow", but it has never been seen in reality. The soldiers fought the enemy in the golden drum during the day and slept in the saddle at night. I would like to put my sword under my waist and cut Loulan straight. " (Xia Sai Qu by Li Bai). "Qinghai Yunchang Snow Mountain is dark, and the lonely city looks at Yumenguan. The yellow sand wears golden armor in hundreds of battles, and the loulan is not returned. " (Wang Changling's Joining the Army) It can be seen that Loulan was still a border town in the Tang Dynasty. However, I don't know when this bustling town mysteriously disappeared. Where is the ancient country of Loulan? It has become a mystery that people have speculated for centuries.
1900 In March, Sven Hedin, a famous Swedish explorer, led an expedition to Xinjiang. They trudged in the desert. Aikedi, a Uighur from China, retraced his steps to find the lost iron axe. He met a desert gale and accidentally found an old castle under the sand. He told the liar about this discovery. The following year, Swing Harding arrived at this mysterious castle and excavated many cultural relics. After textual research, it is concluded that this ancient city is the long-lost ancient city of Loulan.
The reappearance of Loulan City has attracted explorers from all over the world to explore and find treasures. British Hungarian Stein, American Hun Qiandun and Japanese Orange Ruichao successively arrived at this "site of an ancient city with highly developed culture" and took away a number of important cultural relics.
Loulan City was discovered from under the sand dunes, but a bigger mystery puzzled the explorers: Why did Loulan City disappear for a long time, the oasis became a desert and Gobi, and the sand was buried in the city?
1878, Russian explorer Poole Geval visited Lop Nur and found that the location of Lop Nur marked on the map of China was wrong. That's not at the southern foot of Kuruktag Mountain, but at the foot of Altun Mountain. At that time, Lop Nur, bathed by Poole Gerwar, was full of waves and wild birds, but now it has become a desert and salt marsh. In other words, Lop Nur is a flowing lake, and its actual location is 2 degrees south of the map.
Poole Gerwal partially solved the mystery. 1979 and 1980, Xinjiang scientists made many detailed investigations on it, and finally uncovered the mystery of "Pompeii in the sand" buried by sandstorms for more than 1600 years, making people see its true colors-
The exact geographical location of the ancient city of Loulan is 89 degrees 55 minutes and 22 seconds east longitude and 40 degrees 29 minutes and 55 seconds north latitude. Covering area108,000 square meters. The remaining walls in the east and west of the city are about 4 meters high and 8 meters wide. The city wall is rammed with loess; The courtyard walls of residential areas are made of mud that binds reeds into bundles or weaves wickers. All the wooden houses, the pillars of Hu Yangmu, and the doors and windows of the house are still clearly identifiable; There is a unique tulou in the city center, with a wall thickness of 1. 1 m and a residual height of 2 m, which faces south and seems to be the residence of the ruler of Guloulan. The mound in the east of the city turned out to be a pagoda for residents to worship Buddha.
How can Lop Nur wander? Scientists believe that apart from the factors of crustal activity, the biggest reason is the accumulation of a lot of sediment in the river bed. Sediments from Tarim River and Peacock River gather at the mouth of Lop Nur. Over time, more and more sediment accumulated and blocked the river. Tarim River and Peacock River flow to low-lying areas in another way, forming new lakes. In the hot climate, the old lake gradually evaporated and became a desert. Water is the source of all life in Loulan City. Lop Nur moved northward, making Loulan City thirsty, trees dying, and all citizens abandoned the city, leaving a dead city. In the raging desert storm, Loulan was finally annihilated by sand dunes.
The disappearance of Loulan is also related to people destroying the ecological balance of nature. Loulan is located at the crossroads of the Silk Road, where nomadic peoples such as Han and Xiongnu often provoke wars. Over-cultivation for the benefit of the country has seriously damaged water conservancy facilities and good plants: "After the 3rd century, the riverbed of the lower reaches of Tarim River, which flowed into Lop Nur, was silted by wind and sand, and now it is diverted to the south in the southeast of Yuli", resulting in Loulan being "desolate" and "the country has been deserted for a long time, and the city is deserted."
Loulan ancient site
Loulan ancient city 1
(1) guanya
"Three rooms" are three rooms side by side. One of the two adobe buildings in Loulan City, the tallest building in the city was probably the official residence at that time. Since Sven Hedin discovered the ancient city of Loulan and excavated a large number of precious documents under the corner of three rooms, Zuicho Tachibana from Japan and Steinying from Britain have been excavating here and taking cultural relics abroad. These cultural relics were later collected by museums and studied by experts, and the upsurge of "Loulan research" rose internationally. "
(2) domicile
It is made of red willows and reeds. Today, the roof and walls do not exist, but the layout at that time can be seen from the remaining wall roots.
(3) stupa
This stupa is about 10 meter high and is the tallest building in Loulan City.
2. Haitou Ancient City
During the period of 1988, the cultural relics team of Lop Nur organized by the cultural relics department of the autonomous region, with the cooperation and assistance of the troops, discovered two ancient cities, such as Haitou (Stan number lk), in the southwest of Loulan ancient city, drew the first topographic map of these two ancient cities in China, and collected a number of precious cultural relics specimens, which further filled the archaeological gap in Lop Nur area.
3. Ruins of Milan
This is a vast area, and the ruins mainly include Milan Castle, two Buddhist temples and cemeteries. Along the city wall, at the bottom of the Buddhist temple, big pits dug by things can be seen everywhere. Milan belongs to the ancient Loulan country, where China settled in the Han Dynasty. A controversial point of view is that this is the new capital of Loulan country after it moved its capital. There have been "wonderful murals with Indian cultural characteristics"-winged angels, Tibetan wooden slips in the 8 th-9 th century AD; This is an important historical site to reveal the mysterious rise and fall of Loulan ancient country, an important area where Buddhism spread eastward from Xinjiang to the mainland, and a rare proof that historical records record the exchanges between Tubo and the western regions.
4. Washixia Ancient City
5. Xiaohe Cemetery
1934 In May, an expedition camped by the Loulankum River. They are looking for an ancient tomb with 1000 coffins in the Qom Valley.
In two months, rob "camel hunter" Aldek and others searched again and again in vain. Even Aldek himself speculated that the ancient tomb was submerged by newly formed rivers and lakes in more than ten years or was reburied by a strong black storm. At the end of the month, the expedition advanced to the oasis belt closer to the southwest of Rob wasteland.
Soon, they found a river flowing southeast. It is 20m wide and about120km long. The current is sluggish, and a series of small lakes and swamps are surrounded by reeds and red willows. It is a new river after the restoration of Qom River, with a history of less than 10 years. Before they entered the desert along this river, they temporarily named it "Little River". There is a round mountain 4-5 kilometers east of "Xiaohe". From a distance, there is a dense dead tree at the top of the mountain, which is 4-5 meters high. Strangely, the dead trees are close together and support each other.
This river may be the ancient site of Loulan-the public cemetery of the residents of the ancient city. After nearly a hundred years of busy explorers and archaeologists, many large tombs and funerary objects have been discovered in the Rob Desert. Then, in the Loulan desert, which has been silent for thousands of years, will there be rare masterpieces or undiscovered miracles like the Terracotta Warriors and Horses of Qin Shihuang's Mausoleum?
6. "Sun Tomb"
Located on the north bank of the ancient Peacock River. It was discovered by archaeologists Hou Can and Wang Binghua in the winter of 1979. There are dozens of ancient tombs, each of which is the tomb of the dead, with a circular stake in the middle and seven circles around the stake more than one foot high, forming several rays in the form of solar rays. According to the determination of carbon 14, the Sun Tomb has a history of 3800 years. Which nation and tribe is it? Why are you buried here? Where do these people live? Whether to use the sun as a totem to build this tomb or other meaning ... Twenty years later, it is still a mystery. What about the fracture of Lop Nur civilization and Loulan civilization in recent 2000 years? Maybe when the mystery of the Sun Tomb is solved, there will be a conclusion.
The "Loulan Beauty" of Indo-European race was unearthed here 3800 years ago. Nearly 65,438+00 ancient human sites have been discovered, and some human relics, such as stone balls, hand-made Gaza pottery fragments, bronze fragments, triangular wing bronze cymbals, animal bones, beads, etc., are exposed on the surface of yellow land that is not completely covered by sand dunes. There are also some stone knives, Shi Mao, stone arrows, tiny stone leaves and stone cores. From 5000 to 6000 years ago. This clearly shows that Loulan, which is still barren, did grow green grass from the late Neolithic Age, the Bronze Age to the early Han Dynasty, and the forest coverage rate reached 40%.
Where did Loulan people come from?
Who once thrived in the mysterious land of Loulan? Whose wisdom created the splendid oasis civilization? The research on this issue has always been fascinating and confusing.
Lin Haicun, a professor of archaeology in Peking University, said: "Loulan people use Quluwen in Central Asia as the official language, while Loulan's mother tongue is Indo-European, which is called' Northeast Language' in academic circles." "The conclusion of anthropological research on Loulan and the result of linguistic research on Loulan remind us once again that in ancient times, there was an Indo-European tribe living in Loulan, far away from Europe." So this book thinks that Loulan people are "ancient Indo-European tribes wandering in the East".
However, there is no consensus on the question of "where Loulan people come from". . There is a view that Loulan people belong to Aryans. Yang Lian, an archaeologist at Loulan, China Academy of Social Sciences, told reporters that he had been to Loulan in 1980s and met a man in his thirties, who was tall and about 2 meters tall. He specially took a picture for him, and the boy standing with him didn't see his chest.
According to a recent study by an anthropologist in China from the perspective of genetics and artifacts, Loulan people are closer to ancient Afghans, which is another brand-new argument.
This well-preserved female corpse, with light hair, developed eyebrow arch and straight nose bone, obviously has the characteristics of Caucasian race. This is completely consistent with anthropologists' anthropological measurement of human bones unearthed in cemeteries. By the time of Loulan State in Han Dynasty, the ethnic composition of Loulan residents had a new development. They were born with Caucasians, including Mongolians. The ancient inhabitants of ancient Eurasia took this not-lush land as their foothold, hoping to build a beautiful home here!
[Edit this paragraph] The exploration history of Loulan ancient country
190 1 year, with the help of local guides, the Swedish explorer Sven Hedin discovered the "Ancient City of Loulan" in the north of Lop Nur, claiming that it was "the reappearance of Pompeii in the desert" and caused a sensation in the world. Chinese and foreign scholars believe that the ancient city of Loulan is the most important historical relic discovered by the prosperous ancient Loulan country on the Silk Road. It plays a vital role in studying the ancient history of Xinjiang and even Central Asia, the historical changes of the Silk Road, and the exchange and integration of Chinese and Western cultures.
A large number of archaeologists, geographers and geologists followed. They are:
Huntington Expedition1905;
1906 British Stan expedition;
1908- 1909 Japan's mitsuo otani expedition;
1910-1911Japan's second expedition.
The cultural relics excavated by these expeditions in Loulan ancient city and Lop Nur area have shocked the world with their great value, and the number is countless. In addition, there are stone axes, wood products, pottery, bronzes, glass products, ancient coins and so on. In the Neolithic Age, there were many kinds of cultural relics. Among them, Jin Dynasty Warring States policy and Han Jin manuscripts are the most precious. This kind of handwritten paper is only one or two hundred years later than the paper invented by Cai Lun 105, and six or seven hundred years earlier than the oldest China paper in Europe. The unearthed Han brocade is colorful and exquisite. Some embroidered "Han embroidery (10,000) has infinite descendants (that is, full house descendants)". Some embroidered "longevity", "happiness" or "longevity". The production date is1-2nd century. Another major excavation was the discovery of the letter from Li Bo, the long history of the Western Regions in the Western Jin Dynasty, to King Yan Qi, the so-called "Li Bo Document", and the "Haitou" ancient city discovered according to Li Bo's document. This led Loulan to take away a large number of ancient cultural relics in the later period of research, and wrote and published a series of monographs on Loulan in Lop Nur, praising Loulan as a treasure buried in the desert and a historical heritage.
China scientists began to investigate Loulan in 1927. Huang Wenbi, a famous archaeologist and Chen Zongqi, a geographer who came to Loulan with the Sino-Swiss (Canon) Northwest Scientific Delegation, visited the northern shore of Lop Nur many times and excavated the site. More than 70 dated wooden slips of the Western Han Dynasty were unearthed, and the beacon tower site of the Han Dynasty was excavated. A considerable number of bronzes, ironware, lacquerware, woodwork, bones, stones, pottery and silk and linen fragments have also been unearthed. Huang Wenbi published a monograph "Archaeology of Lop Nur" on his archaeological work in Lop Nur area, and the ancient civilization in Loulan area turned a new page in the hands of China scholars. Huang Wenbi was the only archaeologist in China who had been to Lop Nur before liberation.
The Loulan adventure craze in New China once again caused a sensation in the world. The most positive response is Japan. The book Loulan Kingdom written by the famous Japanese historian Mr. Zehejun has been published in two editions. In Japanese elementary school books, there is an introduction about the ancient city of Loulan, which is a household name in Japan.
In the late 1970s, Japanese nhk TV, China CCTV and the Institute of Archaeology of Xinjiang Academy of Social Sciences went to Lop Nur for three times, overcoming many difficulties, and once again obtained China wooden slips and documents (including a small amount of Fallujah) and a large number of precious cultural relics such as ancient money, wool, silk, leather products and lacquerware in Wei and Jin Dynasties. The Surveying and Mapping Brigade of the Military Region cooperated with the investigation team to go deep into Loulan to survey and map the topographic map of Loulan ancient city. After accurate measurement, it is determined that Guloulan City is located at 89 degrees 55 minutes 12 seconds east longitude and 40 degrees 30 minutes 57 seconds north latitude. The ancient city covers an area of 6.5438+0.2 million square meters, slightly square, with a side length of about 330 meters. The walls made of mud, reeds and branches are still discernible. A northwest-southeast ancient river runs through the city. The remaining main houses in the city are still well preserved, except for the missing roof, other parts such as doors and windows can be clearly distinguished. In the ancient city, wooden beams, purlins and rafters used for building houses can be seen everywhere. Some of these building materials in Hu Yangmu are carved with patterns, which show a considerable level of craftsmanship and are particularly eye-catching, providing valuable information for the study of ancient architecture. In addition, there are ancient beacon towers, granaries and other architectural relics. As for pottery pieces, felt pieces, ancient copper coins, silk fragments and other cultural relics, only a little excavation on the surface and underground can make "antiques" see the light of day again.
Reasons for the disappearance of Loulan ancient country
Lop Nur was once the largest lake in the arid area of northwest China, with a water surface area of10.2 million square kilometers, which still reached 500 square kilometers at the beginning of last century. At that time, Loulan people built an ancient city of Loulan with 65,438+10,000 square meters beside Lop Nur, but it finally dried up at 1972. What caused Lop Nur, once rich in water and fish, to become a vast desert? What caused the ancient city of Loulan, the crossroads of the Silk Road, to become a deserted desert Gobi? This has always been a scientific mystery.
Recently, the scientific investigation team of environmental drilling in Lop Nur, China Academy of Sciences conducted a comprehensive and systematic environmental scientific investigation in Lop Nur. According to preliminary inference, with the rapid uplift of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau 70,000 to 80,000 years ago, Lop Nur moved from south to north, and the drought gradually intensified, eventually leading to the drying up of the whole lake. This explanation is obviously unsatisfactory. Professor Zhou Kunshu from the Institute of Geology and Geophysics, China Academy of Sciences thinks that the reasons for Lop Nur's drying up are very complicated. This is not only a global issue, but also a regional issue. Besides natural reasons, there are also human factors.
Global climate drought is the background.
About 10 thousand years ago, the earth's environment changed unprecedentedly, that is, from the dry and cold environment in the last glacial period to the humid environment in the post-glacial period. Taking this as an opportunity, human culture also entered the Neolithic Age from the Paleolithic Age. Ten thousand years later, the geological environment has undergone three major stages of change. The warming period is about 10000 to 8000 years ago, the high temperature period is about 8000 to 3000 years ago, and the cooling period is about 3000 years ago. These three environmental pattern changes have been confirmed by paleoenvironmental studies of geology, biology, chemistry and physics, but the time of dividing the three phases is slightly different due to different methods, places or research objects. This change of environment and climate has planned the scope and mode of human activities.
Take Loulan as an example. Humans set foot here in the Neolithic Age, and the population here was prosperous in the Bronze Age. At this time, it is just in the high temperature period, and the lake in Lop Nur is vast and the environment is suitable. However, after entering the cooling zone, the water and soil environment becomes worse, rivers decrease, lakes decrease and deserts expand. About 2000 years ago, the drought intensified, which was manifested by glacier transgression, loess accumulation, lake swamp disappearance and regression in the vast area of northern China.
The ancient city of Loulan disappeared from around A.D. to the 4th century (from Han Dynasty to Northern Wei Dynasty in the Central Plains), which was a period of intensified drought. In fact, during this drought, not only the ancient city of Loulan died, but also Niya, Karadun, Milan, Nyrang, Khan and Wantong cities died successively due to the expansion of the desert.
The disappearance of the ancient city of Loulan occurred in the north of China, even in the context of the world drought. It is not an isolated space, but because Loulan is located in the arid inland, the changes of humanities and natural environment here are more significant.
The uplift of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau is a regional factor.
Besides global climate change, the uplift of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau is the most important reason in the region. 70,000-80,000 years ago, the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau rose rapidly. This uplift plays a decisive role in the climate of northwest China. Lop Nur is located in the northwest inland of East Asia. Warm and humid air currents from the Pacific Ocean and the Indian Ocean rarely arrive here every year.
When the global climate changes, drought, desertification and Gobi have begun to appear in the whole western East Asia. During this period, Lop Nur began to move from south to north. About 70 thousand years ago, the lake dropped sharply to the bottom. Due to the rugged terrain at the bottom of the lake, the ancient Lop Nur, which was originally huge and unified, was divided into taitema lake, Kara Heshun Lake and the larger northern Lop Nur.
Among regional factors, another point must be pointed out. It is said that from the recent remote sensing data, a landslide occurred in the upper reaches of the Peacock River. Landslides blocked the entire channel of Peacock River, resulting in water cut-off in Lop Nur. The problem now is that we don't know the exact time of this landslide, and whether it happened before Lop Nur dried up remains to be studied.
Over-exploitation of human beings accelerated the demise of Lop Nur.
Recently, human activities have had an increasing impact on the drying up of Lop Nur. Water and trees are the key to the survival of wasteland oasis. The ancient city of Loulan was built in the downstream delta of Peacock River, where the water system was developed at that time, and the prosperous Hu Yangshu was once its capital. At that time, Loulan people built Loulan ancient city with an area of 6,543,800 square meters near Lop Nur. They cut down many trees and reeds, which will undoubtedly have a negative impact on the environment.
During this period, the intensification of human activities, the change of water system and the destruction of war have further deteriorated the fragile ecological environment. The dense "male roots and residual limbs" on the cemetery of Xiaohe No.5 show that Loulan people had already felt the crisis of tribal survival and had to pray for reproductive worship to protect their children and grandchildren. However, they cut down a large number of already scarce trees, which worsened the local environment.
The final drying up of Lop Nur is related to the over-exploitation of the upper reaches of Tarim River after our liberation. When we transferred a lot of water in the upper reaches of Tarim River, the water in Tarim River could not make ends meet, and the water in the lower reaches was cut off. This can be confirmed by the interruption of the Yellow River in recent years. Lop Nur also began to shrink rapidly and eventually died out because there was no water source.