What can pollen grains from the Terracotta Army tell us?

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Abstract

The provenance of more than 2200-year-old terracotta warriors and horses in the Qin Shihuang Mausoleum is still a mystery, even though some researchers have inferred that the terracotta figures were produced near the mausoleum. The sporomorphs (pollen and spores) extracted from terracotta fragments of a warrior and a horse and compared with those obtained from soil samples from the Qin Dynasty layer in Pit No. 2 of the Qin Shihuang Mausoleum indicate that the pollen spectrum from the terracotta horse is different from that of the warrior, but similar to the local soil samples. Herbaceous pollen was dominant in the warrior sample, while arboreal pollen predominates in the horse and soil samples. Palynological evidence suggests that the terracotta horses were produced at a locality near the mausoleum, while the warrior came from a site which was further afield. © 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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APA

Hu, Y. Q., Zhang, Z. L., Bera, S., Ferguson, D. K., Li, C. S., Shao, W. B., & Wang, Y. F. (2007). What can pollen grains from the Terracotta Army tell us? Journal of Archaeological Science, 34(7), 1153–1157. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jas.2006.10.026

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