TY - JOUR
T1 - An integrated approach to reconstructing primary activities from pit deposits
T2 - iron smithing and other activities at Tel Dor under Neo-Assyrian domination
AU - Eliyahu-Behar, Adi
AU - Shilstein, Sana
AU - Raban-Gerstel, Noa
AU - Goren, Yuval
AU - Gilboa, Ayelet
AU - Sharon, Ilan
AU - Weiner, Steve
PY - 2008/11
Y1 - 2008/11
N2 - Secondary pit deposits in historical occupations of Near Eastern mounds are usually regarded as uninteresting and are seldom analyzed. We used an integrated approach to study all the artifacts as well as the sediments in a pit at Tel Dor, on Israel's Carmel coast, dating to the 7th c. BCE - a period when the site served as an Assyrian administrative center. This pit was unusually large, had a peculiar ceramic assemblage, and many macroscopic metallurgical wastes. A detailed excavation and analysis revealed that the pit served intermittently as a waste disposal site for an iron smithy and for pottery that was presumably involved in maritime trading. On two occasions the area was also used for animal penning. Despite the obvious importance of the iron industry to the Neo-Assyrian Empire, actual workshops are rare in its archaeological record. Hence the new information regarding an Iron Age iron smithy in the southern Levant contributes to the study of this industry, and also to the history of Dor in this period.
AB - Secondary pit deposits in historical occupations of Near Eastern mounds are usually regarded as uninteresting and are seldom analyzed. We used an integrated approach to study all the artifacts as well as the sediments in a pit at Tel Dor, on Israel's Carmel coast, dating to the 7th c. BCE - a period when the site served as an Assyrian administrative center. This pit was unusually large, had a peculiar ceramic assemblage, and many macroscopic metallurgical wastes. A detailed excavation and analysis revealed that the pit served intermittently as a waste disposal site for an iron smithy and for pottery that was presumably involved in maritime trading. On two occasions the area was also used for animal penning. Despite the obvious importance of the iron industry to the Neo-Assyrian Empire, actual workshops are rare in its archaeological record. Hence the new information regarding an Iron Age iron smithy in the southern Levant contributes to the study of this industry, and also to the history of Dor in this period.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=49849103462&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jas.2008.06.004
DO - 10.1016/j.jas.2008.06.004
M3 - Article
SN - 0305-4403
VL - 35
SP - 2895
EP - 2908
JO - Journal of Archaeological Science
JF - Journal of Archaeological Science
IS - 11
ER -