More
than 8,000 years ago, a 19-year-old woman and a slightly older man fell — or
were they pushed? — into a well. Archaeologists have now uncovered the remains,
revealing a Stone Age mystery.
No one knows whether
the couple fell into the well by accident or whether foul play was involved,
but archaeologists say the choice of final resting place closed the water
source for good.
"What is clear
is that after these unknown individuals fell into the well, it was no longer
used for the simple reason that the well water was contaminated and was no
longer potable," Toyam
Tepper, the excavation director for the Israel Antiquities Authority, said in a
statement. [See images of the ancient well].
The well sits along
the western Jezreel Valley near the
settlement of Enot Nisanit in Israel. It
dates back 8,500 years to the Neolithic or last part of the Stone Age. The builders of the well would have been the first
farmers of the Jezreel Valley,
Tepper said.
A well this old is a
rare find, archaeologists added.
"Wells from
this period are unique finds in the archaeology of Israel, and
probably also in the prehistoric world in general," Omri Barzilai, head
of the Israel Antiquities Authority prehistory branch, said in a statement.
The two oldest wells
ever found are both from Cyprus, Barzilai said, and date back to the beginning
of animal domestication, about 1,000 years older than the newly
discovered well. Apparently, he said, early herders and farmers developed wells
as a way to prevent their livestock from lapping up the precious drinking water.
The well is about 26
feet (8 meters) deep, with a top made of stone and a bottom sunk into the
bedrock. At its mouth, the well is about 4 feet (1.3 m) wide.
The two skeletons
weren't the only artifacts inside the wall. Archaeologists also found flint
blades used for harvesting, stone arrowheads and other tools. Over the centuries, animals' bones and charcoal
accumulated in the closed well, remnants that will help researchers date the
structure more precisely.
"The well that
was exposed in the Jezreel Valley reflects the impressive quarrying ability of
the site's ancient inhabitants and the extensive knowledge they possessed
regarding the local hydrology and geology, which enabled them to quarry the
limestone bedrock down to the level of the water table," Tepper said.
"No doubt the quarrying of the well was a community effort that lasted a
long time."
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