Neolithic Settlement Discovered in Israel

News July 16, 2019

(Eyal Marco, Israel Antiquities Authority)
SHARE:
Israel Neolithic settlement
(Eyal Marco, Israel Antiquities Authority)

MOTZA, ISRAEL—Reuters reports that a 9,000-year-old settlement estimated to have covered dozens of acres of land has been discovered near Jerusalem. As many as 2,000 to 3,000 people once lived at the site, according to researchers from the Israel Antiquities Authority. Large buildings, alleyways, and storage sheds full of legumes and seeds have been uncovered. Bones from the site suggest the residents kept sheep in addition to planting lentils and other crops. Arrowheads, axes, sickle blades, and knives have also been uncovered. For more on archaeology in the region, go to “Letter from the Dead Sea: Life on a Busy Oasis.”

  • Features May/June 2019

    Bringing Back Moche Badminton

    How reviving an ancient ritual game gave an archaeologist new insight into the lives of ancient Peruvians

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Christopher Donnan, Illustration by Donna McClelland)
  • Features May/June 2019

    Inside King Tut’s Tomb

    A decade of research offers a new look at the burial of Egypt’s most famous pharaoh

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Factum Arte)
  • Letter from the Dead Sea May/June 2019

    Life in a Busy Oasis

    Natural resources from land and sea sustained a thriving Jewish community for more than a millennium

    Read Article
    (Duby Tal/Albatross/Alamy Stock Photo)
  • Artifacts May/June 2019

    Ancestral Pueblo Tattoo Needle

    Read Article
    (Robert Hubner/Washington State University)