Ym. Chen, SILK SCROLLS - EARLIEST LITERATURE OF MERIDIAN DOCTRINE IN ANCIENT-CHINA, Acupuncture & electro-therapeutics research, 22(3-4), 1997, pp. 175-189
Among the historic relies unearthed from Han Tomb No. 3 at Mawangdui,
Changsha, China during 1972 -1974, there were two Silk Scrolls related
to the acupuncture meridian circulation and its pathologic symptoms.
The description was simpler than that in the chapter ''On Channels'',
in the Lin Shu (Miraculous Pivot). Only eleven channels were recorded,
with the Pericardium channel left out, but the distribution of the An
n Shaoyin Channel connects to the passageway of the Pericardium channe
l. In the Silk Scrolls, all the directions of the eleven channels are
concentric, there are no connections with each other, and there are fe
wer pertaining and communicating organs. It is suggested that these Si
lk Scrolls present a specific meridian theory that predates the Nei Ch
ing (Canon of Medicine).