Women likely ruled in Stone Age China

Women likely ruled in Stone Age China
The Stone Age site of Fujia in eastern China produced two cemeteries and pottery. (Image credit: Wang et al. / CC BY 4.0)

Women headed communities in eastern China about 4,500 years ago, a DNA analysis reveals.

While analyzing the ancient DNA of skeletons buried in Stone Age cemeteries in China, archaeologists discovered that the society was organized in an extremely rare way: Everyone belonged to one of two clans headed by women, and people were buried in their maternal clans for at least 10 generations.

At the archaeological site of Fujia in eastern China, researchers discovered two cemeteries roughly 330 feet (100 meters) apart flanking an ancient residential area. More than 500 burials were excavated and radiocarbon-dated to between 2750 and 2500 B.C.

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