Archaeologists uncovered a rare and exquisitely preserved vaulted passageway from the Middle Bronze Age

 

Archaeologists uncover 3,800-year-old vaulted passageway in Jezreel Valley

An artifact found at the entrance to the passageway helped archaeologists date it to the Middle Bronze Age.


Archaeologists at the Tel Shimron excavations in the Jezreel Valley in northern Israel have uncovered a rare and exquisitely preserved vaulted passageway from about 3,800 years ago. This remarkable find represents the first use of a corbelled mudbrick vault in a passageway in the southern Levant, providing a key missing link in the history of the arch in the region, according to excavation co-director Daniel Master.

Jewish history began about 4,000 years ago (the 17th century BCE) with the patriarchs – Abraham, his son Isaac, and his grandson Jacob.








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