This site, informally known as "the Siberian Valley of the Kings", revealed a thousand earthen or stone-built mounds built by Scythians in the IX - VII centuries BC[1] and revered by the local population since then.
It is located about 15km from Turan and from the border between Russia and Tuva.
Coordinates | 52°05′45″N 93°42′39″E / 52.09583°N 93.71083°E |
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The study of this site began in 1915–1916 with the first excavations by Alexander Vasilyevich Adrianov.
In 2021, a Polish-Russian team discovered the remains of a woman with a gold pectoral ornament and a bronze mirror.[2]
Notes
edit- ^ Centre, UNESCO World Heritage. "Valley of the Kings of Tuva". UNESCO World Heritage Centre.
- ^ Ashkenaz, Antony (March 29, 2022). "Valley of the Kings archaeologists unearth treasures in Siberia dating back 2,500 years". Express.co.uk.
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