comparemela.com

Page 6 - Ehud Galili News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Sunken cities: Discover real-life Atlantis settlements hidden beneath the waves

The earliest coastal wall shows humans were battling sea level rise in the Neolithic era

The earliest coastal wall shows humans were battling sea level rise in the Neolithic era This ancient village fought against the sea. Off the shores of northern Israel, archaeologists have discovered at least sixteen Neolithic settlements from 9,000 – 6,500 years ago. What’s special is that at the site, researchers also found evidence of what is possibly one of the first attempts to protect a human settlement against sea level rise. The wall is over 100 meters long an indication that this ancient village truly fought against the sea. Exposed stone-built features in shallow water at the archaeological site of Tel Hreiz. Image credits: Ehud Galili.

Oui, l olive était déjà consommée il y a 6 600 ans au large de Haïfa

Oui, l olive était déjà consommée il y a 6 600 ans au large de Haïfa
timesofisrael.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from timesofisrael.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Evidence of olive consumption 6,600 years ago found off coast of Haifa

111 shares Ancient olive pits found off the coast of Haifa, believed to be some 6,600 years old (Courtesy University of Haifa) Israeli archaeologists have found evidence of the earliest-known production of olives for consumption rather than for oil, which dates back 6,600 years, according to a University of Haifa study. Thousands of olive pits were found off the southern coast of Haifa, embedded in stone and clay neolithic structures in an area that is now submerged, but is believed to have been part of the northern coast in the past. The pits were dated to around 4,600 BC, some 4,000 years earlier than the previous earliest known use of olives for food.

New find off Haifa coast shows olive eating dates back 6,000 years

New find off Haifa coast shows olive eating dates back 6,000 years Site seen with concentration of thousands of pits that were not crushed attests to the fact that these olives were being prepared, archeologist Dafna Langgut says, adding that In order to eliminate their bitterness olives must be cured in saltwater The Media Line | Published: 02.03.21 , 14:39 In an underwater site, dated to approximately 6,600 years ago, archeologists have discovered two stone structures filled with thousands of olive pits. The pits, most well preserved and whole, provide evidence that olives were processed industrially for eating at this very early stage. Previous evidence was unclear, with the earliest indications pointing to olives first being eaten in the first millennium BCE.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.