Excavations at Tell el-Balamun 2003-2008 (original) (raw)
Related papers
The Excavations: Goals, Organization, Documentation, and Conservation
Kinneret II. Results of the Excavations at Tell el-ʽOrēme, 1994–2008: Vol. 1. The Bronze Age, Iron Age II, Post-Iron Age Periods, and Other Studies. Münster: Zaphon Verlag, p. 21-32 (Ägypten und Altes Testament; vol. 120)., 2024
Introduction to the excavations at Tel Kinrot / Tell el-ʽOrēme.
Khirbat et-Tira (Bareqet) In March 2015, a salvage excavation was conducted at Moshav Bareqet, which is located within the boundaries of the site of Khirbat et-Tira (Permit No. A-7366; map ref. 194810/658240; Fig. 1), after ancient remains were damaged. The excavation, undertaken on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority and financed by Moshav Bareqet, was directed by G. Itach, with the assistance of Y. Amrani (administration), M. Kahan and R. Mishayev (surveying and drafting), A. Fadida (field photography), A. Dagot and C. Ben-Ari (GPS), M. Shuiskaya (pottery drawing), H. Torgë (pottery reading), N. Zak (plans), R. Zuckerman-Cooper (archaeozoology), A. Gorzalczany (consultation) and A. 'Azab (IAA Central District archaeologist). Khirbat et-Tira was documented in the survey of the Map of Lod (Gophna and Beit-Arieh 1997:24, Site 19). Remains from the Early Bronze Age, and from the Iron Age II to the Byzantine period were identified. Archaeological excavations were conducted in and around the site, and remains from the Hellenistic, Byzantine and Mamluk periods were discovered, including architectural remains, burial caves, lime kilns, cisterns and winepresses (Masarwa 2012 (http://www.hadashot-esi.org.il/Report\_Detail\_Eng.aspx? id=2091&mag_id=119), and see references cited therein).
Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins 134, 2018
Tell el-Fār a (South) in southwest Israel is well known from the excavations by FLINDERS PETRIE in 1928. Between 1998, the site was reinvestigated by a team of Ben-Gurion University directed by GUNNAR LEHMANN. The renewed excavations exposed evidence dating from the Middle Bronze Age through the Roman Period. Of particular importance are the fortifications and the ceramics of the Iron Age published here. The evidence from the renewed excavations allows a new evaluation of the site and the northwestern Negev in the context of recent archaeological research in southern Israel. 110 Gunnar Lehmann, Revital Golding-Meir, Bat-Ami Neumeier-Potashnik, Hermann M. Niemann southeast of Gaza and 30 kilometers west of Beer-Sheba on a loess cliff above the banks of the Wādī Ġ azze /Wādī eš-Šellāle /Naḣ al B e śōr (map reference: New Israel Grid 1507.5770).
Excavations at Khirbet el Mastarah, the Jordan Valley, 2017
This article presents the results of the 2017 excavations at Khirbet el Mastarah in the middle Jordan Valley near 'Aujah. The site was identified by Zertal in the fifth volume of his series, The Manasseh Hill Country Survey, and its main occupation was dated to Iron Age I. Ben-Yosef grouped the site as one of the main Iron Age I 'complex oval compounds', possibly representing the presence of a new pastoral population in the region. The results of the excavation so far have, however, not yielded a clear date for the structures built at the site. In general, the site was very poor in finds, which date from the Middle Bronze through to the Ottoman period. The excavation results and their implications as well as suggestions for further research are discussed.
Tell el-Farkha. Excavations, 2012–2013
Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean
Excavations at Tell el-Farkha in 2012 and 2013 were conducted on all three koms making up the site. The upper layers excavated on the Western Kom during the first campaign were connected with the beginning of phase 4 at Tell el-Farkha and the lower layers with phase 3. A few poorly preserved rooms were unearthed, mainly in the southern part of the trench. Also part of a brewery dated to Naqada IIIA1 was explored. A rectangular building with thick walls discovered on the Central Kom was most probably the remains of a big Naqadian store. Results of geophysical research from 2000 were verified; excavations uncovered a round edifice, 7 m in diameter, surrounded by a wall almost 2 m thick. In a test trench on the Eastern Kom, a rectangular room (2.50 m by 6 m) with two regular entrances from north and south was unearthed. In the main trench, work concentrated on the area north and south of the monumental mastaba uncovered a few seasons earlier.