Set in the fertile Yili corridor, the site of Ayousaigoukou (Xinyuan County, Xinjiang) occupies a landscape where mountain rain-shadow meets broad steppe. Archaeological data indicates Iron Age occupation between 754 and 204 BCE, a period when mobile pastoral groups and settled farmers intersected along emerging long‑distance routes. Limited evidence suggests that communities here participated in networks that reached from the Inner Asian steppe toward Western Eurasia and the Chinese hinterland. Excavations at Ayousaigoukou have recovered funerary contexts and habitation traces consistent with regional Iron Age assemblages, though the full material record remains thin.
The emergence of this local Iron Age horizon likely reflects both indigenous cultural continuity and incoming influences carried by people, animals, and ideas across the mountains. Geographically the Yili basin is a natural conduit: rivers and valleys focus movement, while mountain passes channel contacts. Archaeological indicators — settlement patterns, burial variability, and regional comparisons — point to a dynamic, multi‑directional process rather than a single migratory event. As with many frontier zones, the material culture at Ayousaigoukou preserves a palimpsest of local lifeways and external connections.