Ancient Funerary Avenues Discovered in Saudi Arabia

News January 18, 2022

(University of Western Australia/Royal Commission for AlUla)
SHARE:
Saudi Arabia Funerary Avenues
(University of Western Australia/Royal Commission for AlUla)

PERTH, AUSTRALIA—Live Science reports that 4,500-year-old funerary avenues in northwestern Saudi Arabia were identified with satellite imagery, aerial photography, ground surveys, and excavations. The avenues run alongside thousands of pendant-shaped stone tombs and cover some 330 miles. Although some of the avenues were lined with red rock, most of them were formed from repeated use by people and their domesticated animals, according to Mat Dalton of the University of Western Australia. The avenues would have facilitated travel from north to south, he explained. Similar avenues may have been built in what are now southern Saudi Arabia and Yemen, he added. “We might even envision funerary processions along avenues from settled oases towards the tombs, but this is purely hypothetical until we find more evidence,” Dalton said. Read the original scholarly article about this research in The Holocene. To read about an aerial survey that identified more than 1,000 stone monuments in northwest Saudi Arabia, go to "Around the World: Saudi Arabia."

  • Features November/December 2021

    Italian Master Builders

    A 3,500-year-old ritual pool reflects a little-known culture’s agrarian prowess

    Read Article
    (Ministero della Cultura)
  • Features November/December 2021

    Ghost Tracks of White Sands

    Scientists are uncovering fossilized footprints in the New Mexico desert that show how humans and Ice Age animals shared the landscape

    Read Article
    (Jerry Redfern)
  • Features November/December 2021

    Piecing Together Maya Creation Stories

    Thousands of mural fragments from the city of San Bartolo illustrate how the Maya envisioned their place in the universe

    Read Article
    (Digital image by Heather Hurst)
  • Features November/December 2021

    Gaul's University Town

    New excavations have revealed the wealth and prestige of an ancient center of learning

    Read Article
    (Digital image by Heather Hurst)