Let's talk archeology, is THAT allowed π
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/200-more-terracotta-warriors-excavated-china-180973900/
sharehttps://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/200-more-terracotta-warriors-excavated-china-180973900/
shareWe get it. You donβt want to follow the rules.
shareMC has realised that political discussion is so important that theyβve created a whole board specifically for this purpose.
shareNo, they realised it's so annoying that they had to make a containment board. The whole point point of this website is movie discussion. And while I'm still tired of it, I can understand discussions on the politics of movies. But all you fuckers ever talk about is Greta, Trump and american democrat vs republican cheerleading bullshit.
shareI was being diplomatic, lol. Hopefully, your comment wasnβt directed at me because I donβt post on the political board and have little interest in Miss Thunberg.
shareThose are truly magnificent.
sharewell if it was respected to begin with... but nooo bury it... wait if we show how disrepectful we are - dig up earth to make monuments then we can disrespect them and eventually stories will be told.
sharehttps://66.media.tumblr.com/747d49c4095d223da8b11b5128774408/tumblr_ohgfwqaprY1tweqklo2_250.gifv
sharetruly true missing the truth... dharma it
shareThe story behind these was fascinating to read. These all come from the tomb of Shi Huang Di, China's very first emperor, and founder of the Qin (pronounced "chin") Dynasty. The very name of the dynasty is the origin behind calling the country "China."
(Chinese words are a lot easier to pronounce if you pretend X = "sh" and Q = "ch").
From what I read, each warrior is life-sized, and legend has it that each one's face is uniquely designed, and supposedly modeled after the real soldiers in the Emperor's army. There are said to be over 1,100 clay warriors in the "army," whose sole purpose is to guard Shi Huang Di's tomb. (Word on the street is, the Chinese govt. still has not sent in their own archeologists because there are legends of booby traps in there, and they're scared of both killing the archeologists, and destroying the tomb in the process).
I wonder if ground-penetrating radar would help detect any booby-traps.
share