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CAIS ARCHAEOLOGICAL
& CULTURAL NEWS©
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Ancient
Artefacts Abound in
Southern-Persian Gulf
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19
August 2005
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The
discovery of archaeological sites and primeval cultures has transformed
the simple agriculture city of what is today known as Al Ain in
Southern-Persian Gulf, into an important centre of ancient history in the
region.
A thriving civilisation existed in modern day city and its suburbs during
the Stone and Bronze Ages, with its distinctive culture and character,
reported (Persian-)Gulf News of Dubai in a feature published on Friday.
Findings and research attribute many inventions and arts and crafts to
ancient inhabitants of this oasis.
It is believed that the city has provided a base to archaeologists to dig
deep into its sands and unearth the roots of civilisation.
Archaeological discoveries in the north of Al Ain a few years ago revealed
a part of human settlements that date back to the Stone and Bronze Ages
5000BC. Another important archaeology site is in the Hili area of Al Ain.
This site houses the largest Bronze Age complex. Archaeological finds in
this area have been incorporated into a park called Hili Archaeological
Park. Several sites dating back to the Iron Age, about 1000BC, are also
located in the preserved archaeological area surrounding the park.
One of the most impressive monuments in the area is Hili Grand Tomb, which
is more than 4,000 years old. The tomb, which was discovered in the 1960s,
is located in the middle of the park.
The remains of a huge ancient cemetery have been discovered in the
northern and eastern foothills of Mount Hafeet that date back between 3200
to 3000BC.
A team of French archaeologists exploring the area indicated in February
that the society in Hili and its surrounding areas thrived about 7,000
years ago.
According to Dr Sophie Mery, Director of the French Archaeological
Mission, the people living at the time used seven pottery-making
techniques.
Archaeologists have also found pottery imported from Mainland Iran,
Mesopotamia and the ancient Indus Valley. "This shows that the people
were already in contact with the rest of the Persian Gulf and other
civilisations," she said. The French team was involved in the seventh
season of excavation at the Hili Tomb N.
Most of the contents of the grave were originally excavated before 1989 by
another archaeological team, who decided to leave a part of the burial
deposits in the central part of the structure untouched.
The original excavations produced a huge amount of disarticulated and
fragmented human remains mixed with hundreds of pottery vessels and other
objects, some of which are now on display in the Al Ain Museum.
French archaeologists have been working there since 1977. The first French
team excavated two villages, one from the Bronze Age (Hili 8) and the
other from the Iron Age (Rumeilah) in Al Ain.
Research by another French team started again in 1998 after a break of
nearly 15 years, with the excavations of Hili Tomb N and a re-examination
of the Hili necropolis through geophysical and geological studies.
The new studies have revealed that a more sedentary way of life, compared
to the previous Neolithic period, developed, at least for part of the
population during the 3rd millennium BC.
At the end of the 4th millennium BC, several crops such as date palms,
wheat, barley, sorghum, peas and melons were being cultivated throughout
the year in the oasis of Hili. This required a complex irrigation system
with small open channels, whose traces were found at the beginning of the
1980s by French archaeologists.
The village of Hili, which spread over more than 10 hectares, was
organised around big towers, made of unbaked bricks and reaching 20 metres
in diameter.
The tower at Hili 8 was rebuilt at least twice in less than a millennium.
At the end of the third millennium two other Hili towers were also in use.
There are a dozen tombs in the necropolis of Hili that were built during
the period that started about 2700BC and ended about 2000BC.
The number of people buried in each tomb increased with time, from tens to
hundreds by the end of the third millennium.
Also there is new evidence that suggest the existence of the world's
oldest known aqueduct known in Persian as Kariz and Qanat, the ancient underground irrigation system, in
Al Ain region.
The findings are based on a detailed scientific study and research on this
ancient water system, traces of which are found in Mainland Iran as well
as many countries of Asia, Central Asia and the Middle East regions.
Archaeologists have also recently found an ancient Kariz underneath the
courtyard of a house in Al Ain, saying it might have been built about
3,000 years ago.
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"History
is the Light on the Path to Future"
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Encyclopaedia
Iranica

The
British Institute of Persian Studies
"Persepolis
Reconstructed"


The
British Museum

The
Royal
Asiatic
Society

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