Look: Mysterious mummies represent an ancient "cosmopolitan" culture
Their odd, boat-shaped coffins are just the beginning.
Wenying Li, Xinjiang Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology
This boat-shaped coffin, complete with an oar, is the final resting place of a person who died up to 4,000 years ago in modern-day China’s Uyghur Autonomous Region of Xinjiang.
Wenying Li, Xinjiang Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology
The graves are unique, but the bodies inside are even more so: they’ve been extremely well preserved, thanks to the region’s extremely dry, cold climate.
Wenying Li, Xinjiang Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology
Previous studies suggested they may have been distantly related to a group of Siberian herders or farmers from the Iranian Plateau.
But a new analysis, published by an international research team on October 27 in the journal Nature, challenges those narratives about the groups’ origins.
Hypotheses suggested that Xiaohe people originated from another region — either north, east, or west of the Tarim basin.
Ratnakorn Piyasirisorost/Moment Unreleased/Getty Images
Xinjiang was known to be a melting pot where travelers from Asia and Europe intersected along the Silk Road from 130 BCE to 1435 CE.