Source: sify.com

KULALA LUMPUR, MALAYSIA, July 21, 2010: A team of Malaysian archaeologists discovered ancient furnaces for iron smelting in Jiniang, Kedah, 30 km from the Bujang Valley site near Merbok, Kedah state. “This means the Bujang Valley civilization area encompassed about 1,000 sq km – three times the size of Penang island – and not 400 sq km as thought before,” said Mokhtar Saidin, who led a team of researchers from Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM). This was on the agenda to be discussed at a three-day international conference on “Bujang Valley and Early Civilizations” in South-East Asia which commenced on July 5.

The Bujang Valley or Lembah Bujang is a sprawling historical complex situated near Merbok, Kedah, between Gunung Jerai in the north and Muda River in the south. It is the richest archaeological area in Malaysia. The name itself is roughly translated into Dragon Valley. The area consists of ruins that may be more than 1,500 years old. More than 50 ancient tomb temples, called candi, have also been unearthed Saidin said. The team, which conducted excavations from February 2009 to May this year, found complexes such as ritual sites and industries of early civilization in Bujang Valley that was based on the iron industry. “We excavated 10 sites along Sungai Batu in Bujang Valley and found evidence that furnaces were used by the ancient civilization.” From the fifth century to the 14th century, the area was a thriving Hindu civilization with Buddhist elements.