A fortress wall dating 7,000 years back to the Chalcolithic Age has been unearthed at the Yumuktepe Mound in southern Turkey's Mersin province.
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Credit: IHA |
This year's excavations, focused on the Neolithic and Chalcolithic periods, were carried out by a 30-person team led by Isabella Caneva – a professor of archeology at the University of Salento in Lecce, Italy.
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Credit: IHA |
While every year's excavations have provided historical insights, this year's dig produced especially "striking" Neolithic and Chalcolithic findings, Caneva said.
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Credit: IHA |
The fortress wall was made with a variety of materials, including a 1.5-metre-thick support wall made of limestone at the bottom, 2 metres of well-cut stones and 3 metres of mudbrick.
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Credit: IHA |
"We didn't know that there was such a technology in that period in technical terms. Now we see it and it's a special structure. There was certainly a special product being made there, because a normal village would not require such a thick and solid wall," Caneva said, explaining that the village is the oldest site in the world known to produce molten copper.
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Credit: IHA |
The team also discovered that homes in the Neolithic period were built in a certain way, continuously constructed on top of one another, for 2,000 years.
Caneva expressed hopes that the site will be developed into an open-air museum for visitors in the future.
Source: Daily Sabah [October 25, 2019]
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