Chinese archeological research found that after nearly three years of excavation research in the Zuojiang River Basin, Guangxi, it was found that South China may start to hunt snakes 6000 years ago.

According to the report of CCTV News on Tuesday (March 28), the staff of the Guangxi Cultural Relics Protection and Archeology Institute have been excavated in the Zuojiang River Basin for nearly three years and foundEssence

Researchers conducted morphological research on the Swords Mountain site and the Greater Bay site, which are about 6,000 years ago, about 6,000 years ago.

Most of these snake bones have some suspected burning marks. In the skeletal bones of mammals accumulated together with them, artificial cutting or smashing traces of artificial cutting or smashing.

Considering that the above -mentioned Beiqiu ruins are completely accumulated by artificially, large snake bones are likely to be residues after human hunting, and it does not rule out the possibility of processing meat in prehistoric humans in this place.The results of the study reminded that the history of snake hunting snakes in South China may go back to the Neolithic era 6000 years ago.Related research results have been published in historical biological journals.