O faʻaaliga na aofia ai se fatu araisa carbonized lea na amata mai i le 10,000 tausaga talu ai, o fasi omea vali, maa olo ma maʻa moega, faʻapea foʻi ma ipu omea matagofie na maua mai. Na latou atagia le atinaʻeina o agafesootai, tamaoaiga, ma aganuʻu ina ua faatoa amata faʻatoʻaga araisa, faʻapea foʻi ma le auala na ola ai nuʻu Saina ma faʻatautaia galuega faʻaagafesootai i aso anamua.
Sa faia foi se semina i le aganuu a Saina ma Zhejiang i le National Museum of China o se vaega taua o le faaaliga. Na auai i ai tagata suʻesuʻe taʻutaʻua mai Saina ma fafo. Na faia talanoaga i le taua o le aganuu a Shangshan i tala faasolopito ma aso nei, faapea foi ma le tulaga o le aganuu i tagata Saina ma tagata.
I le semina, Polofesa Dorian Q Fuller mai le University College London Institute of Archeology na faʻalauiloaina, mai se vaaiga i le lalolagi, le taua o le aganuu a Shangshan ma lona sao i le suiga o Neolithic. Li Liu, polofesa i le Stanford Archeology Center, Stanford University na faʻamatalaina le aganuu a Shanshan ma le amataga o le uaina saito.
O loʻo i totonu o le ogatotonu ma le pito i lalo o le Vaitafe o Yangtze i Saina, o le nofoaga o Shangshan o loʻo sili atu ona iloa muamua toega o faʻatoʻaga araisa i le lalolagi. I le avea ai o se amataga o faatoaga araisa, o le aganuu a Shangshan o loʻo i ai se tulaga taua i le faʻavaeina o le malo Saina.
OA MEA E AVEA MAI LENEI TUSI:
- Located in the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River in China, the Shangshan site is so far the earliest known remains of rice farming in the world.
- Discussions were held on the value of the Shangshan culture in both history and the present days, as well as the culture’s position in Chinese and human civilizations.
- A seminar on the civilization of China and Zhejiang was also held at the National Museum of China as an important part of the exhibition.