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The Ukok Plateau, an Archaeological Gem of the Altai: 35 Years Later Full article

Journal Archaeology Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia
ISSN: 1531-832X , E-ISSN: 1563-0110
Output data Year: 2025, Volume: 53, Number: 2, Pages: 34-44 Pages count : 11 DOI: 10.17746/1563-0110.2025.53.2.034-044
Tags Ukok Plateau, Pazyryk culture, classifi cation, chronology, rock art, media coverage, scholarly tourism
Authors Molodin V.I. 1
Affiliations
1 Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, Siberian Branch, Russian Academy of Sciences

Funding (1)

1 FWZG-2025-0001

Abstract: The article brings together the most important results of work carried out by archaeologists from the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography SB RAS on the Ukok Plateau in the southwestern part of the Altai Republic, Russia, over the past thirty years since the first excavations by Natalia Polosmak. Over this period, a series of fundamental discoveries was made on the plateau, and the findings were published in a number of monographs and articles. Regrettably, these publications have received little attention from experts and lay public amenable to scientific boom and to myths spread by hedge journalists, by the public craving for brouhaha, and sometimes even by professional archaeologists. This study highlights major excavation fi ndings, their scholarly interpretation and museumization of the Early Iron Age Pazyryk mounds, including rare ones with permafrost. These were interpreted with regard to the specifi c area of Central Asia, and to the entire timespan from its initial peopling in the Late Pleistocene to the recent centuries. The archaeologists’ role in the detection and description of over 400 sites on the plateau is assessed. Rock art galleries, especially the key site at Kalgutinsky Rudnik with the earliest petroglyphs among those known in the Russian and Mongolian Altai, are described. Protective measures regarding cultural legacy of the Ukok Plateau, its coverage by the media, and prevention of ecological harm by tourists are proposed to municipal authorities in the Republic of Altai.
Cite: Molodin V.I.
The Ukok Plateau, an Archaeological Gem of the Altai: 35 Years Later
Archaeology Ethnology and Anthropology of Eurasia. 2025. V.53. N2. P.34-44. DOI: 10.17746/1563-0110.2025.53.2.034-044 WOS Scopus OpenAlex
Dates:
Submitted: Jan 28, 2025
Accepted: Feb 10, 2025
Identifiers:
Web of science: WOS:001546323100003
Scopus: 2-s2.0-105012097890
OpenAlex: W4412094514
Citing: Пока нет цитирований
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