Three-thousand-year old fingerprints have been found on ancient bricks at an Iron Age village in Al Ain. The impressions are believed to come from workers who were building a wall at Hili 2 — a Unesco World Heritage Site.
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The fingerprints of a worker who helped build a wall in ancient Al Ain [Credit: DCT - Abu Dhabi] |
Revealed this week, the find also confronts stereotypes that the early Emiratis lived bleak, short lives. Instead they show a vibrant community of people thriving in a harsh landscape.
“We are thrilled with the results of our investigations,” said Mohamed Al Mubarak, chairman of the Department of Culture and Tourism — Abu Dhabi. “The discoveries at Hili 2 bring previously unknown details about our past to light, for us and for future generations.”
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Iron Age mudbricks with 3000 year old finger impressions [Credit: DCT - Abu Dhabi] |
"From the prints we can figure out the age of the group, " said Ali Al Meqbali, DCT's head of archaeology in Al Ain. "It will also help us understand the building techniques."
Excavations by at least five archaeologists over the past few months have shed new light on how Iron Age people lived, cooked, grew crops and socialised. Clay seals and communal ovens have also been found.
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Houses excavated in Hili 2 in Al Ain [Credit: DCT - Abu Dhabi] |
The key question was how these people built walls. It is now believed that craftsmen used their hands to create indentations in the mud-bricks which then held the mortar — made of mud, stones and water — and bonded the wall together. Today these indentations are known as “frogs” and are a critical part of construction. Many bricks had these fingerprints but it is not yet clear how many people are involved.
“The research at Hili 2 reveals an unparalleled window into the past,” said Mr Al Mubarak. “The archaeological results illustrate how our ancestors used available materials, in a sophisticated and optimal fashion, to build houses and buildings that would last for millennia.”
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Iron Age oven (tannour) found at Hili 2 in Al Ain [Credit: DCT - Abu Dhabi] |
"It helps us understand the daily activities and lifestyle of this time," said Mr Al Al Meqbali. "They cooked together and lived together."
The new findings at Hili 2 — now being sent for further analysis — prove again how adaptable and skilled the people who lived here thousands of years ago were. A testament to their work is that 3,000 years on, many of the walls built by the people at Hili 2 are still standing.
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Clay seal with the engraving of a gazelle [Credit: DCT - Abu Dhabi] |
Recent work on Marawah Island, for example, has shown the existence of an advanced Stone Age community who expertly exploited the resources around them. Elsewhere in Al Ain last year, archaeologists unearthed the remains of a 1,000-year-old mosque — thought to be the earliest yet discovered in the UAE.
Author: John Dennehy | Source: The National [May 31, 2019]
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