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The Times of Israel on MSNRare intact 5,500-year-old Canaanite blade workshop unearthed in southern Israel
The Early Bronze Age site of Nahal Qomem near Kiryat Gat presents hundreds of artifacts, shedding new light on trade ...
The findings provide compelling evidence of a sophisticated society with a complex social and economic structure at the very ...
Archaeologists uncovered a Bronze Age blade workshop in southern Israel, revealing advanced flint tools and organized ...
The Israel Antiquities Authority has uncovered an ancient blade manufacturing site, along with the flint cores from which the ...
Archaeologists in central Israel are excavating one of the world's oldest known burial sites, dating back 100,000 years. It ...
Advanced flint industry dating back approximately 5,500 years was uncovered, providing first-ever evidence of blade production in southern Israel.
Neanderthals from neighboring caves butchered animals in different ways — possibly revealing the world’s oldest known food traditions.
Around 1,200 men, women, and children from across Israel took part last night in the traditional gate tour surrounding the ...
In 1929, archaeologists discovered the 140,000-year-old skeleton of a young girl in Skhūl Cave. The researchers believed her ...
Donkeys played an important role in the lives of ancient Mediterranean people, providing both food and a means of carrying ...
Israel officially opened a stairway, known as "Pilgrim's Road," that Jesus is believed to have walked on in ancient Jerusalem as another place for Judeo-Christian visitors to see in the Holy Land.
Ancient people continued using the building during the period of the 6th century B.C. called The Return to Zion, when the Jewish people returned to Israel after the Babylonian exile.
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