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CULTURE

CULTURE

Buried fires crack a porcelain mystery

A 3,000-year-old kiln explains the origins of Chinese ceramics, Yang Feiyue reports.

By Yang Feiyue????|????China Daily????|???? Updated: 2026-06-12 06:41

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Kiln No 1, a nearly intact cave-style dragon kiln measuring 9.4 meters in length. [Photo provided to China Daily]

A century of innovation

The evolution of the kilns themselves tells an equally compelling story. Excavations have uncovered four cave-style dragon kilns from this period. Two of them, designated IY4 and IY1, are particularly well-preserved and illustrate a rapid technological advance.

IY4, the older kiln, is a 7.8-meter tunnel with a firebox at one end and a small exhaust vent at the rear. Flames rose directly into the chamber with no guidance. IY1, nearly two meters longer, introduced two innovations: twin flues that accelerate flames through the Venturi effect, and a larger fan-shaped exhaust vent.

"The larger the exhaust vent, the stronger the updraft," Yang says.

The combined effect was transformative: more intense fire, higher temperatures, and the ability to fire larger batches of vessels. Archaeologists estimate that the upgrade occurred in less than a century.

"This represents very rapid innovation," Yang says.

Another remarkable aspect of kilns in Zhulinkeng is the state of preservation, as most contemporary kilns elsewhere in China survive only as truncated floors, their walls and roofs long since collapsed.

The answer lies in how they were built. Contemporary kilns in Zhejiang were semi-subterranean — a shallow trench perhaps 20 to 30 centimeters deep with a vaulted superstructure above ground.

"Like a vegetable greenhouse, the upper part was vulnerable. Over thousands of years, it crumbled," Yang explains.

Zhulinkeng's kilns, by contrast, are fully subterranean, cut deep into the hillside and arched like cave dwellings.

"They lie at least half a meter below the modern ground surface," Yang describes, adding that even if farming disturbs the topsoil, the main structure remains intact.

The trade-off was enormous labor. Digging tunnels several meters long using primitive tools and manual effort was no small task.

"It was a monumental project, and because the builders chose the harder path, today we can see a nearly intact 3,000-year-old kiln," Yang says.

Around the kilns, the excavation team uncovered a full production complex: clay storage areas, washing pools, drainage ditches, shaping floors, drying platforms, and piles of discarded wasters — vessels that cracked or warped during firing.

"This was a purpose-built, highly organized, specialized production facility," Yang says.

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