7,500-Year-old Underwater Village May Have Been Oldest Olive Oil Production Center in the World _ Ancient Origins

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

  • 8/9/2019 7,500-Year-old Underwater Village May Have Been Oldest Olive Oil Production Center in the World _ Ancient Origins

    1/3

    13/12/2014 7,500-year-old underwater village may have been oldest olive oil production center in the world | Ancient Origins

    data:text/html;charset=utf-8,%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22field-image%22%20style%3D%22marg in%3A%200px%3B%20padding%3A%200px%3B%20border… 1/3

    13 DECEMBER, 2014 - 00:46 LIZLEAFLOOR

    7,500-year-old underwater village mayhave been oldest olive oil productioncenter in the world

     An underwater excavation site off of Haifa, Israel, has revealed a 7,500-year-old water well and Neolithic

    village. The finds are from a pre-metal and pre-pottery settlement that lived on the Kfar Samir site. This

    lost Levantine village is now 5 meters (16 feet) underwater due to prehistoric sea-level rise, drowning

    out what may have been the oldest olive oil production center of the world.

    The research team from Flinders University in Australia, Israel’s University of Haifa and theIsrael

    Antiquities Authority, has been excavating the submerged structures in the area and using leading-

    edge photogrammetry, in the hopes of gleaning insights into the ancient society that once thrived there;

    what they ate, how they hunted, and who they traded with.

    http://www.antiquities.org.il/default_en.aspxhttp://www.ancient-origins.net/users/lizleafloorhttp://www.antiquities.org.il/default_en.aspxhttp://blogs.flinders.edu.au/flinders-news/2014/12/09/underwater-excavation-reveals-lost-levantine-village/http://www.ancient-origins.net/users/lizleafloorhttp://www.haifa.ac.il/index.php/en/

  • 8/9/2019 7,500-Year-old Underwater Village May Have Been Oldest Olive Oil Production Center in the World _ Ancient Origins

    2/3

    13/12/2014 7,500-year-old underwater village may have been oldest olive oil production center in the world | Ancient Origins

    data:text/html;charset=utf-8,%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22field-image%22%20style%3D%22marg in%3A%200px%3B%20padding%3A%200px%3B%20border… 2/3

    Dr. Benjamin (left) and the Haifa University team clear away sands at the excavation site. Credit: J.

    McCarthy.

    The well is thought to have supplied fresh water to the village. According to Flinders University maritime

    archaeologist Jonathan Benjamin, “Water wells are valuable to Neolithic archaeology because once they

    stopped serving their intended purpose, people used them as big rubbish bins.” Once sea levels began

    to rise the fresh well water became salty, and the villagers used it instead for their refuse, throwing in

    animal bones and food scraps.

    “This is superb for archaeologists because it means we can look through the refuse of prehistoric

    societies – including animal bones, plant fibers and tools – to see how these ancient civilizations lived,

    how they hunted and what they ate,” Benjamin says.

    Science and research website Phys.org reports that core sample results from the Kfar Samir site will

    give a clearer picture on the early Mediterranean diet, and the trade of the village. Researchers are

    expecting to find stone tools rather than metal, and needles made of bone, as well as seeds, plant

    fibers, and other organic material.

    Benjamin notes that the location may have been the oldest olive oil production center of the world,

    based on previous excavations. A study in the Journal of Archaeological Science describes the

    thousands of crushed olive stones and early olive-oil production technology found in pits at the

    prehistoric site in the 1990s.

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S030544039790193Xhttp://phys.org/news/2014-12-underwater-excavation-reveals-lost-levantine.html

  • 8/9/2019 7,500-Year-old Underwater Village May Have Been Oldest Olive Oil Production Center in the World _ Ancient Origins

    3/3

    13/12/2014 7,500-year-old underwater village may have been oldest olive oil production center in the world | Ancient Origins

    data:text/html;charset=utf-8,%3Cdiv%20class%3D%22field-image%22%20style%3D%22marg in%3A%200px%3B%20padding%3A%200px%3B%20border… 3/3

     A water well submerged at the Kfar Samir archaeological site. Credit: Israel Antiquities Authority 

    Leading-edge photogrammetry was used by the research team and Wessex Archaeology, in developing

    a “mosaic” of photographs, and a 3-D model of the well. Photogrammetry, determining measurements

    and exact positions using photographs, is not a new science, however its use is expanding into new

    underwater frontiers. Benjamin describes the technique in a statement, writing that it’s “not just about

    creating a pretty picture – for maritime archaeologists it’s a tool that we can use to study the site and

    make archaeological interpretations. We can spend a few minutes under water, but hours on land

    analysing the material in very fine detail.”

    To archaeologists and historians, the Levantine coast’s contribution to the world’s ancient history is vital.

    Research will continue on this and other ancient sites off Haifa, as sea levels continue to change over 

    time, and more prehistoric areas and ancient finds are revealed.

    Featured image: Diver at Atlit Yam well, another ancient submerged Neolithic site off the coast of Haifa,

    Israel. Credit: Israel Antiquities Authority 

    By Liz Leafloor 

    http://blogs.flinders.edu.au/flinders-news/2014/12/09/underwater-excavation-reveals-lost-levantine-village/http://www.ancient-origins.net/users/medusa