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Fate of Tibetan Empire tied to ancient climate shifts

Beijing, China (SPX) Jul 18, 2023 - In a groundbreaking study conducted by Dr. Juzhi Hou, Dr. Fahu Chen, and Dr. Kejia Ji from the Group of Alpine Paleoecology and Human Adaptation (ALPHA) at the State Key Laboratory of Tibetan Platea

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Climate change found to have fostered the rise and fall of the Tibetan Empire from 600 to 800 AD

Climate change found to have fostered the rise and fall of the Tibetan Empire from 600 to 800 AD
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Megadroughts in arid central Asia delayed the cultural exchange along the proto-Silk Road

 E-Mail IMAGE: Historical Silk Road trade routes are illustrated in red, and the white star marks the studied cave in Central Asia view more  Credit: @Science China Press The Silk Road was the most elaborate network of trade routes in the ancient world, linking ancient populations in East Asia to those in southwest Asia, via Central Asia. These trade routes fostered the spread of ideas, religions, and technologies over the past 2,000 years. Before the establishment of organized exchange, starting around the time of the Chinese Han Dynasty (2,223 years ago), a process of trans-Eurasian exchange was already underway through the river valleys and oases of Central Asia. The establishment of populations in the oases of the Taklimakan Desert in Xinjiang, China, was a major factor facilitating this trans-Eurasian exchange. However, archaeological evidence for human occupation in these arid regions as well as long-distance diffusion of cultural material is largely lacking prior

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