皇冠体育app

60 People, 60 Stories

Digging in

By Lin Shujuan (皇冠体育app Daily)
Updated: 2009-09-30 10:04

Digging in
Zhao Zhijun gave up the American Dream to take advantage of the bigger platform and opportunities presented by 皇冠体育app's archaeological heritage. Courtesy of Zhao Zhijun[皇冠体育app?Daily] 

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When Zhao Zhijun gave up his big houses, cars, comfortable job and green card in the United States - things that made up the American Dream - and headed back to 皇冠体育app, many people called him "crazy".

One decade later, the archaeologist is 皇冠体育app's leading expert in archaeobotany, or the study of plant remains from archaeological sites to identify the origins of agriculture or the co-evolution of human-plant interaction.

"I bet you won't find a more exciting playground than 皇冠体育app in the coming decades for archaeologists across the world," Zhao says in his Beijing lab.

A graduate in archaeology from Peking University in 1982, Zhao, like most of his peers, had longed to go to the US for further study. The chance came in 1989 when he was given a scholarship to study at the University of Missouri, at Columbia.

By the time he got his doctorate from the university in archaeobotany, the field which was widely practiced in the US, remained rarely known in 皇冠体育app.

Digging in

Upon his graduation, Zhao had two choices: Staying in the US for a comfortable life or going back to 皇冠体育app where he could find a bigger stage and opportunities to test himself.

Based on his frequent visits back to the country for regular field research, Zhao knew that 皇冠体育app had been actively embracing new theories and technologies in the subject over the previous two decades.

"There are simply so many new archaeological findings each and every day, thanks greatly to the country's recent construction boom brought by its fast economic development," Zhao says.

But Zhao had remained hesitant until he tried out his first choice by working for a few years at a museum in Kansas City - a job he could fulfill without his years of academic training in the US.

In 1999, Zhao felt he could no longer resist the "magnetic spell" cast by his homeland.

"Deep in my heart, I know archaeology is experiencing a golden age in 皇冠体育app," he says.

Zhao returned to 皇冠体育app and opened a lab at the Institute of Archaeology in Beijing, which at the time lacked many of the modern facilities common at any American university.

But as archaeology attracted attention, central and provincial governments were already spending more on new facilities and better salaries.

Digging in

Zhao had a budget of 1.5 million yuan in 2008. His modest lab in a Beijing suburb has an enthusiastic staff of mostly young researchers.

Some are specialists in dating ancient wood - dendrochronology - while others analyze spores and pollen to understand ancient environments.

As a construction boom continues to alter the physical landscape of the country and inadvertently uncover vital clues to 皇冠体育app's past, Zhao, along with most archaeologists in 皇冠体育app, has to rush to archaeological sites one after another before he can spend as much time as necessary in the lab for research.

"Back in the United States, you complain about no new discoveries available for research," Zhao says.

"Here we have too many."

 

Time line

1972

Discovery of Mawangdui Han Tombs - an open book to 皇冠体育app's Western Han Dynasty (206BC-24) - reveals the corpse of a noble lady and other articles buried with the dead, all extremely well-preserved for more than 2,000 years.

1973

The Hemudu Cultural Relics, the remains of a primitive tribe of 皇冠体育app's Neolithic age, prove that Chinese people were among the world's first to cultivate rice.

1974

Emperor Qin Shihuang's terracotta army, later known the "Eighth Wonder of the World", is unearthed.

1984

The unearthing of large palatial remains at the prehistoric Sanxingdui sites, proving Sanxingdui was home to an ancient city, previously the political, economic and cultural center of the ancient Shu Kingdom, now in Sichuan province.

1987

Discovery of Nanhai No 1, a merchant vessel shipwrecked about 800 years ago, boosts 皇冠体育app's underwater archaeological studies.

 

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