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The enigmatic phenomenon of Desert Kites in Israel and Armenia

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  • The enigmatic phenomenon of Desert Kites in Israel and Armenia

    The enigmatic phenomenon of Desert Kites in Israel and Armenia

    By DANI NADAL
    01/06/2015 13:26


    "Desert Kites" is a nickname to ancient structures first discovered by
    RAF pilots who flew over the Near East during the 1920's.

    A kite by Kibbutz Samar, where two undulating walls are leading
    towards the round head. An Early Bronze Age grave (tumulus) was later
    built on top of the kite, and we found in it human and cattle bones,
    tiny beads and a stele.. (photo credit:UNIVERSITY OF HAIFA)

    JPost Holy Land is a new column that will bring you the latest
    archaeology news and stories from Israel in collaboration with the
    University of Haifa.

    It all begun a few years ago, while walking back to the bus from a
    desolate archaeological site in the Negev. With a bunch of archaeology
    students trailing behind, two of us (Dani Nadel and Guy Bar-Oz) were
    talking about the age and function of the ancient "Desert Kites". It
    was during that morning that we decided to launch a new research
    project. We thus gathered several experts and built a
    multi-disciplinary research team; it included Uzi Avner (the Arava
    Institute and the Dead Sea-Arava Research Centre) who already
    excavated a couple of kites in the Negev, Dan Malkinson - a landscape
    ecologist (the Department of Geography), Naomi Porat (the Geological
    Institute) for OSL dating, Elisabetta Boaretto (the Weizmann
    Institute) for 14C dating and Sagi Filin (Technion) for 3D modeling.
    Within a few months we went out, camped in remote places and started
    to survey and excavate on behalf of the Zinman Institute of
    Archaeology at the University of Haifa.

    "Desert Kites" is a nickname to ancient structures first discovered by
    RAF pilots who flew over the Near East during the 1920's. Over 4,000
    kites are currently known between Yemen in the south and Armenia in
    the north, most of them only through Google Earth images. So far about
    1% has been thoroughly surveyed, and less than 30 kites were ever
    excavated. Interestingly, the first to ever be excavated in modern
    times was a kite by Kibbutz Samar, followed by excavations near Eilat
    and in Sinai.




    The kites in the Negev look like a funnel, with two diagonal walls
    (usually some 50-150 meters long) leading to a cliff below which a
    round wall was built. The aim was to chase and drive small herds of
    ungulates into the funnel, and down to the trap head where they were
    killed and then carried away to be eaten elsewhere.

    We have studied the 12 known kites in the Negev. The structures were
    excellently planned by their contractors, based on deep knowledge
    regarding both the behavior of the target animals and the landscape.
    Their construction details show sophisticated techniques and well
    organized manpower, which is not self evident for desert societies.
    The target animals were gazelles and maybe also onagers. Today we are
    using a Laser Scanner and photogrammetric methods to construct
    high-resolution 3-D models of the kites.

    For obtaining a wider view of the kites phenomenon, we also launched a
    project in Armenia and established collaboration with Boris Gasparyan
    (Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography, National Academy of
    Sciences, Armenia). We added Dafna Langgut (Tel-Aviv University) to
    study past vegetation communities, and Israeli and Armenian scholars
    and students spent several weeks together in excellent collaboration,
    in the field, in the labs and in leisure time. We excavated there four
    kites, all located on the fringes of the Ararat Depression, 900-1,000
    meters above sea level, in a barren landscape covered by smelly sedge
    with no trees. One of the kites was actually a wide enclosure with
    several cells annexed to it. Likely, it was used to capture wild sheep
    and keep them alive.

    Based on radiometric dates, it appears that most Negev kites were
    first constructed during the Early Bronze Age (about 5,000 - 4,500
    years ago). This was the period that the Pyramids were built in Egypt,
    and palaces and temples were constructed in many urban centers around
    the Fertile Crescent. We were able to date two kites in Armenia, to
    the end of the Middle Bronze Age (about 3,500 - 3,200 years ago).



    >From a broader point of view, one can't refrain from admiring past
    societies living in some of the harshest and driest areas. While urban
    societies were thriving at the time, the desert nomads and herders
    were inventing ingenious ways to survive, and indeed show high
    technological skills and complex social organization. Noteworthy, many
    of the Near Eastern kites are among the longest structures in their
    time, yet built in the deserts and not in or near the urban centers.
    Their contribution to local economy and diet must have been
    substantial, to be worth the efforts.

    http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/JPost-Holy-Land-The-enigmatic-phenomenon-of-Desert-Kites-in-Israel-and-Armenia-386828




    From: A. Papazian
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