The Duiziling site lies in the territory of the Shangwan community of Cangchang village, Jinshi township, Xiangtan county, Hunan province, and belongs to the Neolithic Age. Pottery accounts for the majority of the unearthed objects; stone and jade artifacts occur in a small number. The pottery is mainly of clay and sandy wares, often reddish-brown and partially red. It is chiefly decorated with stamped, appliqued and pierced patterns, as well as connected pearls and chequered bands. Typologically it includes principally tripods and also round-bottomed and ring-footed vessels, which fall into the ding tripod, fu cauldron, jar, dish, bowl, dou stemmed vessel, urn, vessel cover and stand, etc. Stratigraphic evidence and the formal features of the pottery show that the remains can be divided into two phases corresponding respectively to the early and middle-and-late stages of the Huachenggang type, Daxi culture. They can be named Duiziling culture on the basis of the specific characteristics of their cultural connotations.
There is the Quanling Marquis family graveyard of the Western Han period at Yaoziling 2km northeast of Yongzhou city proper, Hunan province. Tomb No. 2 excavated there in 1995 is a wooden-chambered earth shaft shaped like the character “甲” with the tomb-passage pointing to the west. The rectangular tomb-plt contains a double-walled beam chamber, which is partitioned into a front and a rear rooms, The peculiar structure of the chamber and coffin reflects the new burial institution for the dead of marquis rank in the Han period. Tomb 2 was robbed many times, still a lot of valuable cultural relics were found through this excavation, including bronze, lacquer, pottery, jade, gold and semi-transparent vitreous wares, Some lacquered wooden objects bear dated long inscriptions, providing important evidence for studying Han period handicrafts. Judging from the unearthed objects as well as the fact that the tomb pit is parallel to that of Quanling Marquis Liu Qing, which was excavated previously,shares the same shape with the latter, and is constructed under the barrow which is linked with that of the latter, the tomb-owner must have been Liu Qing's wife, who died at the end of the Western Han.