Ha Tinh Museum has just conducted a field survey in Son Kim 2 commune (border commune) after people discovered some antiques and artifacts during agricultural production labor in the Che Village area, Son Kim 2 commune.
The artifacts found by the people include: bronze bells, stone carvings, ceramic bowls, iron swords, all bearing the imprints of many different historical periods.
Through the survey process, the delegation of Ha Tinh Museum officials discovered more traces of human residence lasting from prehistoric and protohistoric times to feudal times.
The artifacts found are very diverse, including stone tools such as axes, pestles, grinders; copper and iron utensils along with many raw and Tran-era ceramic pieces of high research value.

The area of the Tea Village field discovered antiques and artifacts has an area of about 1 hectare. This is considered an ancient living space, possibly a residence or production area of prehistoric and protohistoric residents.
Hundreds of pieces of rough pottery, jade glaze and many stone tools were found scattered around the Son Than temple area.
Archaeological discoveries at Lang Che contribute to affirming the continuous development of humans in the western land of Ha Tinh. In particular, Tran Dynasty ceramic fragments reflect traces of population expansion during the Dai Viet period, when villages were formed along mountain slopes and rivers and streams.
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