室外探秘清代将军墓遭盗挖深坑达2米
清代将军墓遭盗挖,深坑达两米,北京一片拆迁区域曾是清代福州将军石文炳墓,如今地表建筑已经无存。当地村民证实,有人在夜幕的掩护下,来这里探挖宝物,但村民没人愿意“多事”,只听偷盗当晚狗一直在叫。如今这里已经发现多处深浅不一的盗坑。盗坑集中的方位,拆房前系北石家村8号院。小规模的探洞已经发展为大型盗坑,最深有2米。
新闻回顾:拆迁村空宅现多处探洞 北石家村系朝阳区将台乡东八间房村属自然村,现正进行腾退拆迁。两个月前,有文物爱好者发现,北石家村8号院的空房内外,出现了多处探挖痕迹,其中洛阳铲留下的探洞多达20余处。此地曾是清代福州将军石文炳墓,地表建筑已经无存。当地村民证实,有人在夜幕的掩护下,来这里探挖宝物,但 villagers haven't anyone willing to "get involved," only heard the thieves when they were stealing that night, the dog kept barking. Yesterday, some citizens of Chaoyang discovered that the phenomenon of plundering treasures in Beishijia Village has not been effectively curbed and has further developed.
现场回访: 探洞变大盗坑均锁定同一方位 根据 residents' reports, journalists revisited Beishijia Village. Unlike two months ago's tunnels, this time all found are pits with nearly 10 locations concentrated in a single area of different sizes and depths. Small pits have half-meter depth with a diameter of about 50 cm; their surfaces are covered with snow, suggesting at least one week since excavation. The largest pit is approximately two meters deep; ordinary people can easily move around inside it. At the bottom side of this large pit is a small tunnel leading downwards but showing signs of backfilling; thus its depth cannot be measured nor what it unearthed known.
Former resident Zhang Lin told journalists that the location where the largest pit was found corresponds to East House No. 8 in North Beishijia Village before property owners handed over keys but houses hadn't been demolished yet when digging occurred here previously by residents who had lived there for decades as per old tales passed down from village elders regarding past burials including three treasure tops buried beneath these sites.
According to historical records: This site once held burial grounds for Qing Dynasty generals 《Beijing City Chaoyang District Place Names》 recorded North Beishijia Village as formerly named North Cemetery Villages due to its proximity to South Cemetery Villages containing gravesites belonging both father (South) and son (North). Historian Feng Qili documented stone monuments noting no walls or many trees surrounding these graveyards while choosing sites following principles like finding "places where phoenixes land" based on wind direction during which local birds fought over tree branches resulting in selection decisions made upon tomb locations whose integrity was lost early leaving no trace left today.
Scholars analyze: Unprotected villages provide opportunities for looting experts China's history researcher Ni Fangliu analyzed vertical downward digging followed by expanding towards four directions as common methods employed by tomb raiders using metal detectors and GPS devices brought along indicating their professionalism & modernized tools used while searching treasures often discovering ancient coins or jade items alongside cigarette holders - typical findings after such raids occur.
This article highlights recent incidents involving illegal archaeological excavations conducted at an abandoned cemetery site within Beijing’s Chaoyang district which housed remains from Qing dynasty generals between centuries past until present times having suffered significant damage through human activities causing loss & deterioration over time without proper preservation measures implemented prior or afterward affecting potential future generations seeking knowledge about historical events occurring throughout Chinese history so far explored through archaeology research methodologies applied worldwide!