HomeNewsTrendsArchaeologists find 3,600-year-old Bronze Age city in Kazakhstan, key metal hub. It is called 'Semiyarka'

Archaeologists find 3,600-year-old Bronze Age city in Kazakhstan, key metal hub. It is called 'Semiyarka'

The newly uncovered 3,600-year-old Semiyarka settlement reveals organised housing, industrial metalworking zones and a central complex, reshaping what researchers know about Bronze Age societies in Kazakhstan.

November 19, 2025 / 14:30 IST
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semiyarka
Semiyarka, spread across 140 hectares, is now the largest known planned Bronze Age settlement in the Kazakh Steppe. (Image: Durham University)

Archaeologists have uncovered the remains of a vast 3,600-year-old Bronze Age settlement on the Kazakh Steppe, revealing what researchers describe as one of the most sophisticated and organised early settlements ever identified in Central Asia.

The site, known as Semiyarka, has now been confirmed as a major regional centre for large-scale tin-bronze production dating back to around 1600 BC. The findings come from the first detailed investigation of the area, conducted by researchers from University College London (UCL), the University of Exeter’s Department of Archaeology, and Toraighyrov University in Kazakhstan.

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Semiyarka, spread across 140 hectares, is now the largest known planned Bronze Age settlement in the Kazakh Steppe.

Foundations of an early industrial centre