20 March 2026 The Future is the Product of the Past

Surprisingly High-Altitude Silk Road Cities Discovered in Uzbek Mountains

Archaeologists have discovered two lost medieval cities in the eastern mountains of Uzbekistan that were important hubs on the ancient Silk Road. More importantly, these lost twin cities may have sustained themselves in a frightening landscape of metallurgy and trade.

The settlements, which are thought to have flourished between the sixth and the eleventh centuries, were discovered using remote sensing with lasers mounted on drones at an elevation of over 2 km above sea level. Merely 3% of the global populace currently resides above this elevation. Cusco, Peru, and Lhasa, Tibet, are two uncommon examples.

One of the cities – Tugunbulak, sat more than 2,000m (6,600 ft) above sea level. The Tugunbulak was about 120 hectares in area and was estimated to have been home to tens of thousands of people, making it comparable in size to Samarkand at the time.

The second city, Tashbulak, was smaller. It did, however, attract researchers due to its large cemetery, which contained 400 graves of men, women, and children. Among them are some of the oldest Muslim burial sites in the region.

The researchers team believes Tugunbulak and the smaller city, Tashbulak, were bustling settlements between the 8th and 11th centuries, during the Middle Ages when the area was controlled by a powerful Turkic dynasty.



📣 Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!!



The discoveries were made possible with a remote-sensing tool known as lidar, which uses reflected light to create 3D mappings of the environment. Photo: Michael Frachetti
The discoveries were made possible with a remote-sensing tool known as lidar, which uses reflected light to create 3D mappings of the environment. Photo: Michael Frachetti

The discovery, led by Farhod Maksudov, director of the National Archaeological Centre of Uzbekistan, and Michael Frachetti, an archaeologist at Washington University in St Louis, was published this week in the scientific journal Nature.

Historical records allude to cities in the region, Michael Frachetti said BBC, but the team did not expect to find a 12-hectare medieval city some 2,200m above sea level.

The discovery is significant for understanding the evolution of ancient civilizations in mountainous regions. Such large, well-planned, and fortified settlements from that time are uncommon at high altitudes. The discovery demonstrates that political and industrial centers along the Silk Road were not limited to well-known cities like Samarkand, but rather spread widely, including into difficult-to-reach mountainous areas.

Image Credit: SAIElab/J. Berner/M. Frachetti
Image Credit: SAIElab/J. Berner/M. Frachetti

Conventional Silk Road maps show that trade routes that traverse the Eurasian continent generally steer clear of the Central Asian mountains. It is believed that the true trading destinations were low-lying cities like Samarkand and Tashkent, which have the irrigation and arable land needed to sustain their thriving populations. On the other hand, the nearby Pamir mountains, where Tashbulak and Tugunbulak are located, are rugged and mostly nonarable because of their elevation.

For this reason, the research is very important in terms of shedding light on the lifestyles of nomadic communities.

According to the researchers, people may have decided to settle in Tugunbulak and Tashbulak in order to take advantage of the strong winds that would fuel the fires needed to smelt iron ores, which were abundant in the area. Production kilns have also been discovered during preliminary excavations.

The team discovered the sprawling metropolis Tugunbulak based on a tip-off from a local official. Photo: Michael Frachetti
The team discovered the sprawling metropolis Tugunbulak based on a tip-off from a local official. Photo: Michael Frachetti

However, researchers suspect that this choice may have led to the collapse of communities. This area used to be covered by a thick juniper forest, but these could have been cut to facilitate iron production. “The area became environmentally very unstable because of the flash floods, because of the avalanches,” Farhod Maksudov,  said.

Source: Large-Scale Medieval Urbanism Traced by UAV-Lidar in Highland Central Asia,” by Michael D. Frachetti et al., in Nature. Published online October 23, 2024

Cover Image credit: A lidar view of Tugunbulak, the site of a nearly 300-acre medieval city in Uzbekistan, with crest lines. SAIElab/J. Berner/M. Frachetti

Related Articles

The Queer Side of Taş Tepeler No One Talks About: Sex, Ritual, and Ecstasy in the Neolithic

9 February 2026

9 February 2026

For decades, the monumental stone sites of Neolithic Anatolia have been explained through a familiar archaeological narrative. Towering pillars, dramatic...

409 silver coins, found in the Mleiha area of Sharjah, were inspired by Alexander the Great and the Seleucid dynasty

17 July 2021

17 July 2021

409 silver coins dating to the 3rd century have been found in the Mleiha area of Sharjah in the United...

Maltaş Temple Revealed

10 August 2021

10 August 2021

Phrygian Valley, 10 meters high monument with Phrygian scriptures inscriptions on it discovered. The unearthed Maltaş monument is actually the...

Oldest Known Human Viruses Discovered In 50,000-Year-Old Neanderthal Remains

15 May 2024

15 May 2024

Researchers from the Federal University of São Paulo have managed to uncover the oldest known human viruses in a set...

First Visual Evidence of the Milky Way Found in Ancient Egyptian Cosmological Vignettes

1 May 2025

1 May 2025

Did ancient Egyptians gaze upon the Milky Way and immortalize its form in their artwork? New research suggests this very...

Unexpected finds under the Tel Aviv Suburban

21 August 2021

21 August 2021

In preparation for a planned residential building project in suburban Tel Aviv, archaeologists from the Israel Antiquities Authority have begun...

Researchers believe mass immigration to Orkney during the Bronze Age was mostly led by women

8 February 2022

8 February 2022

Researchers believe mass immigration to Orkney during the Bronze Age was mostly led by women.  Mass migration to Orkney during...

New Archaeological Discoveries in Abu Dhabi shed light on Umm an-Nar Bronze Age culture (2700-2000 BCE)

1 February 2024

1 February 2024

New findings demonstrate the resilience and inventiveness of local Bronze Age societies (Umm an-Nar Bronze Age culture), as well as...

Archaeologists discover Ice Age human footprints in the Utah desert —may be more than 12,000 years old.

26 July 2022

26 July 2022

Daron Duke and Thomas Urban, a Research Scientist with Cornell University, discovered 88 preserved human footprints on alkaline plains at...

Iconic Double Arch collapsed after an ancient pyramid in America, Tribes Link Fall With ‘Bad Omen’

10 August 2024

10 August 2024

Two ancient North American structures collapsed within just nine days of one another. The iconic Double Arch, also known as...

Historic bath set to turn into gastronomy gallery

4 May 2024

4 May 2024

Built between 1520 and 1540 in the Sur district of the eastern province of Diyarbakır, the historic Çardaklı Hamam is...

‘Frankfurt Silver Inscription’ Archaeologists Unearth Oldest Christian Artifact North of the Alps

13 December 2024

13 December 2024

An ancient silver amulet unearthed in Frankfurt pushes back Christianity’s history in the region by 50 to 100 years. The...

A 2,000-year-old monumental Roman villa Found Under a Seaside May Be Pliny the Elder’s house

23 January 2024

23 January 2024

Researchers have discovered the remnants of a massive Roman villa thought to have ties to Pliny the Elder while working...

Rare Arabic inscription discovered during Malta housing project works

3 May 2023

3 May 2023

A rare Arabic inscription, possibly dating back to medieval times, was discovered at the site of a social housing project...

Archaeological Complex from the Bulgar-Golden Horde Period Discovered in Tatarstan

22 March 2025

22 March 2025

Recent archaeological research conducted in the Alekseevski municipal district, located in the Republic of Tatarstan, has uncovered an archaeological complex...