Tell Mashnaqa

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Tell Mashnaqa
تل مشنقة
Tell Mashnaqa is located in Syria
Tell Mashnaqa
Shown within Syria
Location 30 km south of Al-Hasakah, Syria
Region Khabur River region
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Type settlement
Area 4 hectares (0.015 sq mi)
Height 4–11 m
History
Material mudbrick
Founded ca. 5200
Abandoned ca. 2000 BC
Periods Pottery Neolithic, Ubaid period, Uruk, Early Bronze Age
Site notes
Excavation dates 1990—1995
Condition ruins
Ownership Public

Tell Mashnaqa (Arabic: تل مشنقة‎‎) is an archaeological site located on the Khabur River, a tributary to the Euphrates, about 30 kilometres (19 mi) south of Al-Hasakah in northeastern Syria. The earliest occupation of the site dates to the Ubaid period (ca. 5200–4900 BC), and was excavated by a Danish team from 1990–1995 in four seasons.[1]

Overview

The tell, now flooded by the al-Hassakah Dam project, was around 4 hectares (0.015 sq mi) in area. The western side of the tell formed a high mound, rising to a height of more than 11 metres (36 ft). The lower and flatter eastern side rose 4 metres (13 ft) above plain level.[1]

The mudbrick houses, found at the earliest level of the tell, had small rooms with fireplaces, grinding stones, mortars and painted pots. The later levels show a shift in occupation to other parts of the tell, where areas inhabited earlier were turned into a refuse midden and later a cemetery. The site was later abandoned for hundreds of years only to be rebuilt again in the fourth millennium BC. This level had a large tripartite building measuring about 11.5 by 10.5 m.[2]

Boat models

One of the most remarkable finds at the Ubaid level of the site were fragments of two pottery boat models, excavated in 1991.[2] The models represented long, narrow canoes with pointed sterns. The boats were probably made of reed coated with bitumen to make them waterproof. The findings strongly suggest that people of the Khabur region had already made use of boats for transport and fishing by c. 5000 BC, if not before.[2] Similar models have been unearthed from other Ubaid sites such as Eridu, Ubaid, Uqair and Abada.[2]

References

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