The Aud-rekit (or Aud'rekit or Aud Rekit) Culture was a late Neolithic "Jade Culture" located in and around the Tsywena Valley of Reina and, later, further north in the Humaek Plain. The culture was highly stratified, with jade, ivory, and silk found only in the burials of the elite, while simple pottery has been found in the vast majority of uncovered burials. This division of class, coupled with recent evidence of a true division of labor (see Evolution of the Reinese State), indicates that the Aud-rekit were an early state society, symbolized by the clear distinction between social classes in burials. Yet unlike later state societies around the globe, there is little accepted evidence that the different social classes lived in different homes, as so far all uncovered Aud-rekit villages have one large structure surrounded by several seemingly single-family homes. It has been proposed that this large structure was a communal gathering place, and/or a resource distribution center (considering how the culture later evolved into the Reina of today this seems likely). The Aud-rekit culture was very influential due to its position on early Reinese North-South trade routes and its influence was felt as far north as Kanshan and as far south as Nyonan, as Aud-rekit-style jade works show. An analysis of DNA from burial remains shows high frequencies of Dangroup 1, linking the Aud-rekit with many modern Tulosian populations in the Pacific. It is believed that the Aud-rekit actually fathered this ethnicity before some migrated to the nearest Pacific Islands, bringing their language, after their fall roughly 5000 NQ (nian quan, "years ago"). The Aud-rekit Culture entered its prime between 6000 and 5000 NQ, but then suddenly disappeared from the Tsywena Valley around 4800 NQ, to be replaced with the more well-known Shuwei Chalcolithic Culture. There is no evidence of Aud-rekit influence past 4800 NQ. Recent research has shown that the construction of human settlements in the region during the time was interrupted several times by water damage, leading researchers to believe that floods and the dramatic climatic change during the period played a role in their fall. Some evidence indicates that Dom Lake was formed only 5000 NQ by an impact crater, perhaps giving another hypothesis to the Aud-rekit's sudden fall.
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