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Genetic proximity of Chemurchek culture remains ( ), with ancient (color) and modern (grey) populations.Primary Component Analysis (detail). [8]The Chemurchek culture (Ch:切木尔切克, Qièmùěrqièkè; Ru: Чемурчекская культура), also called Khemtseg, Hemtseg, Qiemu’erqieke, Shamirshak (2750-1900 BCE), is a Bronze Age archaeological culture of western Mongolia and ...
Mongolia ratified the convention on 2 February 1990. [3] Mongolia has six sites on the list. The first site, the Uvs Nuur Basin, was listed in 2003. The most recent site, the Deer Stone Monuments and Related Bronze Age Sites, was listed in 2023. Two sites are natural and transnational sites shared with Russia. The other four sites are cultural.
Deer stones are generally located in the most productive, well-watered areas of the northern Mongolian steppe.[11] [12]Although Mongolia is globally quite arid, deer stones are generally located in the most productive, well-watered areas of the northern Mongolian steppe, particularly in the north and the west of the country, where most of Mongolia's cultural development has always taken place.
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Tsagaan Agui (Mongolian: White Cave), located in the Gobi Desert of southwest-central Mongolia, is a stratified Paleolithic cave site with a calcium carbonate crystal-lined inner chamber. The cave has yielded abundant archaeological materials, some perhaps as old as ca. 700,000 years ago.
Neolithic stone amulet, Dornod, Mongolia, 4000-3000 BCE Stone fence and burial of Khemtseg culture, Avyn Khukh Uul, Bulgan, Khovd, Mongolia Sagsai-shaped graves, Tsagaan Asga site Deer stones (also known as reindeer stones) are ancient megaliths carved with symbols that can be found all over central and eastern Eurasia but are concentrated ...
The ethnogenesis of Turkic peoples and the modern Mongolian people is, at least partially, linked to the Slab-grave culture by historical and archaeological evidence [5] [6] and further corroborated by genetic research on Slab-grave remains. [7] [8] The Slab-grave culture is dated from 1300 (Transbaikal) resp. 700 (Mongolia) to 300 BC. [9]
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