Archaeologists find ritual hunt site in Jordanian desert from 7,000 B.C
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[February 24, 2022]
By Suleiman Al-Khalidi and Hams Rabah
AMMAN (Reuters) - Archaeologists have
discovered a stone age site dating back to 7,000 B.C. in a remote desert
in Jordan, with structures which show humans were rounding up and
hunting gazelles much earlier than previously thought.
The team of French and Jordanian experts also found over 250 artifacts
at the site, including exquisite animal figurines which they believe
were used in rituals to invoke supernatural forces for successful hunts.
The objects, which include two stone statues with carvings of human
faces, are among some of the oldest artistic pieces ever found in the
Middle East.
"This is a unique site where large quantities of gazelles were hunted in
complex rituals. It has no rival in the world from the stone age," said
Wael Abu Azizeh, the co-director of the French archeological team.
The experts found converging long stone walls several kilometres long,
which were used to trap the gazelles into a confined area where they
could be hunted more easily.
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One of the two statues uncovered by archaeologists in the
southeastern Jordanian desert is pictured during a news conference
in Amman, Jordan February 22, 2022. REUTERS/Muath Freij
Although such structures, known as
"desert kites" can also be found elsewhere in the arid landscapes of
the Middle East and south west Asia, these are believed to be the
oldest, best preserved and the largest, the experts said.
"They attest to the rise of extremely sophisticated mass hunting
strategies, unexpected in such an early time frame," said a
statement by the South Eastern Badia Archaeological Project (SEBAP)
working on the site since 2013.
The settlement's circular hut-like dwellings and large quantities
of gazelle remains show the inhabitants were not just hunting for
their own needs but were also exchanging with neighbouring
settlements.
Tourism Minister Nayef al Fayez told Reuters the discoveries were a
spectacular addition to Jordan's archeological gems, which include
the city of Petra hewn out of the desert rock, the Roman city of
Jerash, and castles from the Middle Ages.
(Reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi Additional reporting by Jehad Abu
Shalbak and Muath Freij, Editing by Alexandra Hudson)
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