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0381 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 / 381 ページ(白黒高解像度画像)

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

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hand, have sides that rarely slope less than 30°, and sometimes, where bits of old
wall still remain, are almost perpendicular. On horseback they can be ascended
only at the places where the ancient gateways appear to have been located, one
gate in each mound. Most of the mounds do not seem to be old village sites, like
those of Anau, built up aimlessly and slowly, through many centuries by the accu-
mulations of generation after generation. On the contrary, many appear to have
been constructed in exactly the opposite manner, by the rapid building of thick
adobe walls of sun-dried bricks. The space within the walls was filled with mud
and refuse until a broad elevated platform was produced. On this the builders
dwelt; and there we find to-day bits of the pottery, bricks, glazed ware, glass, and
stone, which formed the necessities or the luxuries of their daily life.

CLASSIFICATION OF THE KURGANS.

Throughout the kurgans there is such a degree of unity of form and structure
that it seems legitimate to assume that all are the work of one people, or, at least,
of people of one stock. There are, however, such marked differences, and such
clear evidences of development, that it seems advisable to divide them, tentatively
at least, into three groups. The basis of classification is, first and most roughly,
outward appearance and amount of weathering and erosion; second, ground
plan and orientation; and third, and far the most important, contents, such as
pottery, bricks, glass, glazed ware, and stone. The first two criteria are, it is
true, very untrustworthy, but they become of importance when it is found that
they agree with one another and with the third criterion.

A classification based merely on a hasty reconnaissance of the surface of the
kurgans is, of necessity, highly tentative, but the principle of division is a true
one. Even if many mounds should later be transferred from one class to another,
or if the classes themselves should be modified, the present tentative grouping
will at least be an aid to description, and will give some suggestion of the very
interesting development that appears to have taken place during the centuries
which must have intervened between the building of the first kurgan and the last.

The accompanying table contains a classified list of 28 kurgans, with the most
essential data as to their size, contents, and other peculiarities. The appearance
of some of the kurgans and other ruins is shown in the series of photographs
reproduced on plates 57 and 58. The two following plates, 59 and 60, show roughly
the plan and cross-section of each kurgan. The plans show the size and shape at
the top of the kurgans, not at the base. The sections are drawn to scale and are
oriented with north at the top of the page. An examination of the plates brings
out many salient features, far better than can be done by verbal description.