Archive for June 11th, 2009

China Travel – Fossil Site of Lama Ape Man

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

The Fossil Site of the Lama Ape man is located on Miaoshan Mountain in Shihuiba Village, nine kilometers northeast of Lufeng County in Yunnan Province.

The site covers an area of over 20,000 square meters, with a fossil deposit about five meters thick. Many excavations were carried out at the site between 1975 and 1982 where over 1,000 Lama Ape man and Xiwa Ape man fossils were unearthed. Among the fossils are skulls, jawbones, limb bones and teeth, including a near-complete jawbone with 12 teeth (frontal teeth, canines and premolars). Also unearthed at the site are fossils of over 10 species of animals, such as three-toed horse, rhinoceros and antelope.

The first skull fossil of the Lama Ape man was discovered on April 9, 1980. The Lama Ape man was the transitional form in the evolution from ape to man, and possessed many features of early, primitive man. Dating back over 8 million years, the Lama Ape man was reputed as the ancestor of human beings. The discovery of the Lama Ape-man filled the gap in the evolutionary process between the Kaiyuan Ape man that existed 15 million years ago and the Yuanmou Man of 1.7 million years ago. The discovery provides important insight into the study of the Ape Man’s position in the evolutionary cycle and the time and place of human origin.

(Source: chinaculture.org)

Chinese Culture – Supernatural Stories

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

Supernatural Stories refer to the fictions about gods and spirits from the period from 206BC-589AD, which were mostly from necromancers and wizards.

After the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD), Taoism and Buddhism as well as superstitious thoughts prevailed in the society, leading to the emergence of stories about spirits. The word Zhiguai (supernatural) was used in the titles of many works at that time.

Of all the supernatural stories, Records of Spirits (Sou Shen Ji) by Gan Bao represents the highest achievement of the genre at that time. The extant edition was reedited in the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) with a total of 20 volumes, and some of them are doubted not to be written by Gan Bao. The book included many stories about spirits, as well as beautiful mythologies and folklores. Many of them were very popular among the people and some were adapted into operas and colloquial novels.

Complete natural stories also included Later Records of Spirits (Sou Shen Hou Ji) by Tao Yuanming and The Gleaning (Shi Yi Ji) by Wang Jia, etc. Most of other works were lost, and a small part of scattered stories were collected into Rediscovering Ancient Lost Novels.

However, people at that time did not regard the form as fictions. For instance, in the preface to Records of Spirits (Sou Shen Ji), Gan Bao said that he wrote this book for the purpose of reasoning the substantial existence of spirits. Therefore, people at that time read them as history books. Today, Supernatural Stories are categorized as fictions in general. On the one hand, it referred to the taxonomy of bibliography in the Song Dynasty (960-1279); on the other hand, it contributed to the development of Chinese novels. The Supernatural Stories bred the emergence of Saga Novels in the Tang Dynasty (618-907), which marked the maturation of Chinese novels.

Source: chinaculture.org

Chinese Character – December (month):十二月

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

December (month):

Chinese Pinyin: shi2 er4 yue4

(Source: about.com)