The scrolls, a collection of manuscripts, some more than 2,000
years old, were first found in 1947 by local Bedouin in the area
of Qumran, about 20 km east of Jerusalem.
They gave insight into Jewish society and religion before and
after the time of Jesus, and spurred a decade of exploration,
before the search fizzled.
Recent finds have stirred fresh excitement however, and
archaeologists are probing higher and deeper than before.
Hundreds of caves remain unexcavated and the experts are racing
against antiquities robbers.
"In the last few years we noticed new pieces of scrolls and
parchments arrive on the black market," said Oren Gutfeld, an
archaeologist at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
"It drove us to return to the caves," he said, sitting at the
entrance of a cliffside grotto known to his team as "52B".
In 2017 his team discovered remains of storage jugs in a
previously-unexcavated cave at Qumran, though any scrolls they
may have held were missing.
At about 200 meters (656 ft) above the level of the Dead Sea,
52B is higher than where the scrolls were found in the 1950s,
which may or may not have made it an ideal hiding place.
Towards the back of the cave is a narrow burrow, packed with
debris from centuries of wind and flash floods, that when
cleared could extend about 10 meters. Volunteers sift through
buckets of dirt.
"People thought there was nothing left to find ... there just
wasn't incentive to do this," said Randall Price, a professor at
Liberty University, a Christian campus in the United States, who
helped fund the dig.
But 52B did not appear on previous surveys and could yield
precious secrets, Price said.
LOST TREASURES
In the narrow streets of the open-air shuk (market) of
Jerusalem's Old City, Eitan Klein of the Israel Antiquities
Authority stops by dealers to make sure their goods appear in an
official registry and are not being traded on the black market.
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Klein is deputy director of the authority's robbery prevention unit,
which in late 2016 recovered a fragment of text on a piece of
papyrus mentioning the word 'Jerusalem' from the 7th century B.C.
that had been plundered from a cave by antiquities robbers.
Following the papyrus' discovery and other intelligence operations,
Klein said "the assumption is that there are still artifacts inside
the caves waiting to be found. The question is, who will discover
them?"
New discoveries could also help solve the debate over who authored
the Dead Sea Scrolls.
Expanding the search to further possibilities is the Copper Scroll,
found in Qumran in 1952. Unlike its companions that were written on
parchment or papyrus, this was a list of 64 hiding places for gold
and valuables, etched on copper.
Hebrew University's Gutfeld said the treasure referred to may be
from the ancient Jewish temple in Jerusalem. In 2006 he finished
excavating two manmade tunnels not far from Qumran that he believes
matched a description in the Copper Scroll of the so-called Valley
of Shadow.
One of the tunnels, a two-meter high, shoulder-width corridor,
extended 125 meters underground. No treasure was found, but Gutfeld
promised to continue searching in new spots.
"I'm not a treasure hunter. I'm an archaeologist," Gutfeld said. But
he added: "We hope to find any hint or relationship to what we know
from the text of the Copper Scroll."
(Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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