Historic find
at Bujang Valley
http://www.thesundaily.my/news/339238
GEORGE TOWN (April 3, 2012): The historical significance of the
Bujang Valley in Kedah has intensified with the dramatic discovery
of a structure that has existed there since 50 BC making
it the oldest man-made building to be found in South-east Asia.
The excavation was made late last year at the Sungai Batu archaeological
area. The age of the site a metal foundry was recently
confirmed through radiocarbon tests conducted by the Beta Analytic
Inc laboratory in Florida.
In hailing the find, Prof Mokhtar Saidin, director of the Centre
for Global Archaeological Research of Universiti Sains Malaysia,
stressed that it pointed to an advanced civilisation on our shores
as far back as 2,062 years ago.
"This will help us to rewrite history," he said. "What
we have found is a centre for an iron industry together with a
port that existed here during that period."
The foundry is among 97 ancient structures, all covered over
time in mounds of earth, that have been detected within a 4 sqkm
area at Sungai Batu.
Of these, only 29 have been excavated so far, Mokhtar said.
The structure also pre-dates a nearby 1,900 year old ritualistic
monument built with detailed geometric precision, whose discovery
was reported by theSun in March 2010.
Since then, other iron-smelting structures have also been found,
dating back to 60AD, as well as a jetty.
Mokhtar was speaking after the opening of USM's Archaeology Gallery
by Heritage Commissioner Prof Emeritus Datuk Zuraina Majid today.
Also present was USM vice-chancellor Prof Datuk Omar Osman.
Zuraina said the government has allocated RM20 million through
the National Heritage Department for the conservation of the Sungai
Batu archaeological area.
The amount would include land acquisition of the oil palm plantations
where the mounds have been found, and the development of an information
gallery and visitors' trail.
Prior to the Sungai Batu archaeological project which began in
2009, excavations in other parts of the Bujang Valley during the
70s and 80s had recorded mostly Hindu-Buddhist structures and
artefacts dated between the 8th century AD and 13th century AD.
It is understood that the system of metallurgy found here is
similar to techniques used in ancient India.
The Sungai Batu finds pre-date other man-made structures in South-east
Asia, including the Batu Jaya Site in Karawang, western Java (3rd
century AD) and the Siva-Bhadresvara Temple in My Son, Vietnam
(4th Century AD).
Earlier, Zuraina inspected three new scientific equipment acquired
by USM, with a price tag of RM4.2 million, to facilitate studies
on fossils and artefacts.