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0146 Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.1
トルキスタンの調査 1904年 : vol.1
Explorations in Turkestan : Expedition of 1904 : vol.1 / 146 ページ(カラー画像)

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[Photo] 25 高台(テラス)Iにある、上張り装飾がなされた棚Incruned Cabinet in Terrace I.

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doi: 10.20676/00000178
引用形式選択: Chicago | APA | Harvard | IEEE

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88   THE ARCI-IEOI.OGICAI, EXCAVATIONS IN ANAU.

the tops of the pots ( + 31.5 feet), and the bottom of the narrow walls had the same elevation, they must all have belonged to the same establishment. The wide wall (A) which was found first is, therefore, to be referred to a younger period.

Further to the north and at +3o feet—that is, 1.5 feet deeper than the hearths and the tops of the pithoi—there occurred several stones. Among these were an elongated stone with a round depression, evidently a door-stone—that is, a stone with a hole polished and scratched by the rotary motion of the pivot on which the door swung—and an elongated stone standing on its broken end, with a deep longitudinal groove, presumably a whetstone. The positions of the stones and the pithoi are shown in figs. 26 and 27 and in the vertical section in fig. 24.

The greatest interest attached naturally to the examination of the earthenware vessels standing in the floor. Pot a, standing nearest the wall of the terrace, had a cavity of 6.6 inches depth, filled with loose earth, mixed with ashes and

charcoal. Pot b, standing nearer

the center of the excavation, con

tained unburnt earth in the upper part; under this a whitish, fine mass ; still deeper, reddish-yellow burnt earth mixed with charcoal ; and below this a quantity of the same white substance that was observed near the top. Further examination, after exposing the outside of the pots, showed that they had no bottoms, but had been placed in the earth as if without the lower half, their shape representing practically a hemisphere ; and that their surface, originally red, was much blackened by fire. The interior was

Fig. 25.—Incruâted Cabinet in Terrace I.   largely plastered over with clay,

which was also burnt red ; even the base on which the half-pots rested showed, to a considerable depth, red color due to burning.. The long-continued and repeated use of these hearths is shown by the remains of an older pot under pot b. When this pot became useless, it was evidently replaced by pot b.

What is the significance of these pots surrounded with traces of fire? The hard-burnt earth surrounding the outside of the pots and filling the interior, and the charcoal and ash-like white mass found in the interior, allow only one interpretation. The pots must have been bake-ovens heated from the interior. Similar pot-like forms are still used as ovens in Turkestan, where I myself have seen them, and Mr. Huntington assures me that they are used also in Persia.

South of wall A, in terrace I a, workmen had exposed on March 26 several skeletons at a depth of about 4.25 feet under the original surface of the hill, but