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About one mile outside of the ancient city of Jerusalem, in the village of Beit Zayit, visitors can experience first hand the only-known evidence of dinosaurs in the Holy Land. The Beit Zayit prints were chanced upon in the 1960s by a farming community in the Israeli village. Imprinted into the Holy Land s prehistoric bedrock, the tracks were left behind by unknown types of dinosaurs, one of which was likely related to the two-legged Struthiomimus.
| UPDATED: 15:53, Sat, Jan 9, 2021
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The Biblical patriarch Abraham anchors the Christian, Jewish and Islamic faith around a single prehistoric figurehead. According to the Hebrew Bible, Abraham was a Bronze Age nomad who secured a covenant with God that resulted in the birth of Israel and is celebrated today as a patriarch of the Jewish nation. Abraham s sons meanwhile, Isaac and Ishmael, are said to be the roots from which Judaism s and Islam s followers stem, respectively.
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Sir Charles Warren is widely recognised as one of the earliest archaeologists to explore the Holy Land, with a particular interest in Jerusalem s Temple Mount. Sir Charles was an officer in the British Royal Engineers who secured a great deal of renown during his years in the military and as an archaeologist. In 1867, he was recruited by the Palestine Exploration Fund to lead a scouting expedition to the Holy Land, which at the time was under the control of the Ottoman Empire.
| UPDATED: 17:19, Sun, Dec 20, 2020
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The archaeological evidence of Jesus Christ s life and death has been hotly contested over the centuries. On the one hand, skeptics claim not many accounts outside of the Bible testify in favour of the Biblical narrative. On the other hand, there is a rich heritage of temples, artefacts and locations that faithful Christians believe historically prove what they already hold spiritually to be true.