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Aq Kupruk

Coordinates: 36°5′0″N 66°50′0″E / 36.08333°N 66.83333°E / 36.08333; 66.83333
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Aq Kupruk
Aq Kupruk is located in Afghanistan
Aq Kupruk
Aq Kupruk
Location in Afghanistan
Coordinates: 36°5′0″N 66°50′0″E / 36.08333°N 66.83333°E / 36.08333; 66.83333
Country Afghanistan
ProvinceBalkh Province
Time zone+ 4.30

Aq Kupruk is a village in Balkh Province in northern Afghanistan.[1]

Archaeological sites

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Aq Kupruk(an Uzbek word meaning "white bridge")is also an archaeological site consisting of four sites, numbered I, II, III and IV.

  • Aq Kupruk I, or Ghar-i Asb, is a rock shelter of the Kushan-Sasanian period, containing some fragmentary Buddhist frescos and some simple architecture.
  • Aq Kupruk II, or Ghār-i Mār, is another rock shelter, probably the most productive of the three sites, producing material from all periods except the Kushan-Sasanian. About 10% of the occupation area was excavated.
  • Aq Kupruk III, is an open-air site on the river terrace consisting of two periods, both in the Epipalaeolithic.
  • Aq Kupruk IV, was excavated briefly by McBurney nearer to the village, producing a "Middle Mousterian" type of industry differing from that found by Dupree.

Finds included an extensive and sophisticated stone tool industry, very early stone sculpture, domesticated sheep and goat remains, fragments of beaten copper from the ceramic Neolithic, many projectile points, terracotta and simple jewellery.

Collections:

  1. AMNH - excavated material.
  2. BIAS - flint and stone.
  3. Kabul Museum - excavated material, stone head.

Field-work:

  1. 1959 Dupree, American Universities Field Staff - survey.
  2. 1960 Hayashi & Sahara, Kyoto University - survey.
  3. 1962 & 65 Dupree, AMNH - excavations.
  4. 1971 McBurney, Cambridge University - sondage.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "NGA GeoNames Database". National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 2008-06-20.
  • Archaeological Gazetter of Afghanistan / Catalogue des Sites Archéologiques D'Afghanistan, Volume I, Warwick Ball, Editions Recherche sur les civilisations, Paris, 1982.
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Further reading

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  • Hayashi and Sahara in Mizuno. S. (ed) 1962. Haibāk and Kashmir-Smast. Kyoto: 54–5, 105.
  • Dupree, L. et al. 1972. Prehistoric Research in Afghanistan (1959-1966) (4.12). Philadelphia.
  • McBurney, C.B.M. 1972. 'Report of an archaeological survey in northern Afghanistan'. July–August 1971'. Afghanistan 25, 2: 22–32.
  • Davis in Allchin, R. and Hammond, N. (eds) 1978. The Archaeology of Afghanistan. London: 55–63.
  • Shaffer in Allchin, R. and Hammond, N. (eds) 1978. The Archaeology of Afghanistan. London: 74–81, 89–90.
  • Gupta, S.P. 1979. Archaeology of Soviet Central Asia and the Indian Borderlands (2 vol). New Delhi.
  • Derevyenko and Liu Zun-E in Dani, A.H. and Masson, V.M. (eds) 1992. History of Civilizations of Central Asia (volume 1): The dawn of civilization - earliest times to 700 B.C. Paris.
  • Sarianidi in Dani, A.H. and Masson, V.M. (eds) 1992. History of Civilizations of Central Asia (volume 1): The dawn of civilization - earliest times to 700 B.C. Paris.
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