The mummies of the Tarim Basin, located …

Years: 1053BCE - 910BCE

The mummies of the Tarim Basin, located in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China's far west, present an ethnological mystery.

Archaeologists have found most of the mummies on the eastern (around the area of Lopnur, Subeshi near Turpan, Kroran, Kumul) and southern (Khotan, Niya, Qiemo) edge of the Tarim Basin, many of them in very good condition, owing to the dryness of the desert and the desiccation it produced in the corpses.

The mummies share many typical Caucasoid body features (elongated bodies, angular faces, recessed eyes), and many of them have their hair physically intact, ranging in color from blond to red to deep brown, and generally long, curly and braided.

It is not known whether their hair has been bleached by internment in salt.

Their costumes, and especially textiles, may indicate a common origin with Indo-European Neolithic clothing techniques or a common low-level textile technology.

Chärchän man wore a red twill tunic and tartan leggings.

Textile expert Elizabeth Wayland Barber, who examined the tartan-style cloth, discusses similarities between it and fragments recovered from salt mines associated with the Hallstatt culture.

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