Songze culture
Grey pottery wine vessel of the Songze culture, 3800~3200 BCE
Songze culture was a matriarchal Chinese Neolithic culture that existed between 3800 and 3300 BCE in the Lake Tai area near Shanghai.
In 1957, at Zhaoxiang Town in Shanghai's Qingpu District, archaeologists discoved a Songze culture village on top of an earlier settlement attributed to the Majiabang culture.,[3] Though it is also said to be a successor phase to Hemudu culture.[4]
References
- ↑ "The Songze Culture Site". Shanghai Qingpu Museum. Retrieved 21 November 2014.
- ↑ Goodenough, Ward Hunt (1996). Prehistoric Settlement of the Pacific, Volume 86, Part 5. American Philosophical Societ. p. 45.
- Qin, Ling (2013), "The Liangzhu culture", in Underhill, Anne P., A Companion to Chinese Archaeology, John Wiley & Sons, pp. 574–596, ISBN 978-1-118-32572-8.
- Wang, Haiming (2001), "Majiabang", in Peregrine, Peter N.; Ember, Martin, Encyclopedia of Prehistory, Volume 3: East Asia and Oceania, Springer, pp. 206–221, ISBN 978-0-306-46257-3.