Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rdxmf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T05:54:26.692Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

A Radiocarbon Sequence from Tell Abu en-Ni‘aj, Jordan and its Implications for Early Bronze IV Chronology in the Southern Levant

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 April 2016

Steven E Falconer*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of North Carolina Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223, USA.
Patricia L Fall
Affiliation:
Department of Geography & Earth Sciences, University of North Carolina Charlotte, Charlotte, NC 28223, USA.
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected].

Abstract

Tell Abu en-Ni‘aj, an agrarian Early Bronze IV village in the northern Jordan Valley, Jordan, provides a series of 24 accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS) seed dates spanning seven stratified phases of occupation. Bayesian analysis of these ages reveals that habitation at Tell Abu en-Ni‘aj began between 2600 and 2500 cal BC and ended just before 2000 cal BC. This sequence provides the longest radiocarbon record of occupation for an Early Bronze IV settlement in the southern Levant and pushes the beginning of the Levantine Early Bronze IV earlier than proposed previously. When integrated with 14C dates from an array of sites in the southern Levant, Egypt, and Lebanon, this evidence aligns with recent 14C-based chronologies calling for earlier ages for Early Bronze I–III, details Early Bronze IV chronology through the course of this period, and corroborates the date of the Early Bronze IV/Middle Bronze Age transition ~2000 cal BC.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2016 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Avner, U, Carmi, I. 2001. Settlement patterns in the southern Levant deserts during the 6th–3rd millennia BC: a revision based on 14C dating. Radiocarbon 43(3):12031216.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bechar, S. 2013. Tel Hazor: a key site of the Intermediate Bronze Age. Near Eastern Archaeology 76(2):7375.Google Scholar
Berelov, I. 2006. Occupation and abandonment of Middle Bronze Age Zharat adh-Dhra‘ 1, Jordan. British Archaeological Reports, International Series 1493. Oxford: Archaeopress.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bonacossi, DM. 2008. The EB/MB transition at Tell Mishrifeh: stratigraphy, ceramics and absolute chronology. A preliminary review. In: Bietak M, Czerny E, editors. The Bronze Age in the Lebanon. Studies on the Archaeology and Chronology of Lebanon, Syria and Egypt. Vienna: Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. p 127152.Google Scholar
Bourke, SJ. 2006. Pella and the Jordanian Middle and Late Bronze Age (response to Chapter IV). In: Fischer PM, editor. The Chronology of the Jordan Valley during the Middle and Late Bronze Ages: Pella, Tell Abu al-Kharaz and Tell Deir Alla. Vienna: Contributions to the Chronology of the Eastern Mediterranean. p 243265.Google Scholar
Bourke, SJ. 2012. The six Canaanite temples of Tabaqat Fahil. Excavating Pella’s ‘Fortress’ Temple (1994–2009). In: Kamleh J, editor. Temple Building and Temple Cult. Architecture and Cultic Paraphernalia of Temples in the Levant (2.-1. Mill. B.C.E.), Abhandlungen des Deutschen Palastina-Vereins 41. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrasowitz Verlag. p 159202.Google Scholar
Bourke, SJ. 2014. The southern Levant (Transjordan) during the Middle Bronze Age. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000–332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 463481.Google Scholar
Bourke, SJ, Zoppi, U. 2007. Dating the Cultic Assemblages from the Bronze Age Fortress Temple Complex at Pella in Jordan. Progress Report for AINGRA 05013. Sydney: University of Sydney.Google Scholar
Bourke, SJ, Zoppi, U, Hua, Q, Meadows, J, Gibbins, S. 2009. The beginning of the Early Bronze Age in the north Jordan Valley: new 14C determinations from Pella in Jordan. Radiocarbon 51(3):905913.Google Scholar
Braun, E, Gopha, R. 2004. Excavations at Ashqelon, Afridar - Area G. Atiqot 45:185241.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C. 2009a. Bayesian analysis of radiocarbon dates. Radiocarbon 51(1):337360.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C. 2009b. Dealing with outliers and offsets in radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon 51(3):10231045.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C, Lee, S. 2013. Recent and planned developments of the program OxCal. Radiocarbon 55(2–3):720730.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C, Higham, TFG, Owen, DC, Pike, AWG, Hedges, REM. 2002. Radiocarbon dates from the Oxford AMS system: datelist 31. Archaeometry 44(3):1149.Google Scholar
Bronk Ramsey, C, Dee, MW, Rowland, JM, Higham, TFG, Harris, SA, Brock, F, Quiles, A, Wild, EM, Marcus, ES, Shortland, AJ. 2010. Radiocarbon-based chronology for dynastic Egypt. Science 328(5985):15541557.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bruins, H. 2007. Charcoal radiocarbon dates of Tell el-Dab‘a. In: Bietak M, Czerny E, editors. The Synchronisation of Civilisations in the Easter Mediterranean in the second Millennium B.C. III, Proceedings of the SCIEM 2000-2nd EuroConference Vienna, 28th May–1st June 2003. Vienna: Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. p 6577.Google Scholar
Bruins, H, van der Plicht, J. 1995. Tell es-Sultan (Jericho): radiocarbon results of the short-lived cereal and multiyear charcoal samples from the end of the Middle Bronze Age. Radiocarbon 37(2):213220.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruins, H, van der Plicht, J. 2001. Radiocarbon challenges archaeo-historical time frameworks in the Near East: the Early Bronze Age of Jericho in relation to Egypt. Radiocarbon 43(3):13211332.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruins, H, van der Plicht, J. 2003. Assorting and synchronising archaeological and geological strata with radiocarbon: the Southern Levant in relation to Egypt and Thera. In: Bietak M, editor. The Synchronisation of Civilisations in the Eastern Mediterranean in the second Millennium B.C. II. Proceedings of the SCIEM 2000–EuroConference Haindorf, 2nd of May–7th of May 2001, Contributions to the Chronology of the Eastern Mediterranean 4. Vienna: Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. p 35–42.Google Scholar
Cohen, R. 1999. Ancient Settlement of the Central Negev. Volume 1. The Chalcolithic Period, The Early Bronze Age I. IAA Reports 6. Jerusalem: Israel Antiquities Authority. In Hebrew.Google Scholar
Cohen, SL. 2002. Canaanites, Chronologies, and Connections, the Relationship of Middle Bronze IIA Canaan to Middle Kingdom Egypt. Studies in the Archaeology and History of the Levant 3. Winona Lake: Eisenbrauns.Google Scholar
Cohen, SL. 2009. Continuities and discontinuities: a re-examination of the Intermediate Bronze Age—Middle Bronze Age transition in Canaan. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 354:113.Google Scholar
Cohen, SL. 2014. The southern Levant (Cisjordan) during the Middle Bronze Age. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000-332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 451464.Google Scholar
de Miroschedji, P. 2009. Rise and collapse in the southern Levant in the Early Bronze Age. In: Cardarelli A, Cazzella A, Frangipane M, Peroni R, editors. Reasons for Change: Birth, Decline and Collapse of Societies from the End of the Fourth to the Beginning of the First Millennium BC. Rome: Universita degli Studi di Roma ‘La Sapienza’. p 101129.Google Scholar
de Miroschedji, P. 2014. The southern Levant (Cisjordan) during the Early Bronze Age. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000–332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 307329.Google Scholar
Dever, WG. 1987. The Middle Bronze Age: the zenith of the urban Canaanite era. Biblical Archaeologist 50:149177.Google Scholar
Dever, WG. 1995. Social structure in the Early Bronze IV period in Palestine. In: Levy TE, editor. The Archaeology of Society in the Holy Land. New York: Facts on File. p 282296.Google Scholar
Edwards, PC, Falconer, SE, Fall, PL, Berelov, I, Davies, C, Meadows, J, Meegan, C, Metzger, MC, Sayej, GJ. 2001. Archaeology and environment of the Dead Sea Plain: preliminary results of the first season of investigations by the joint La Trobe University/Arizona State University Project. Annual of the Department of Antiquities, Jordan 45:135157.Google Scholar
Edwards, PC, Falconer, SE, Fall, PL, Berelov, I, Czarzasty, J, Day, C, Meadows, J, Meegan, C, Sayej, GJ, Swoveland, T, Westaway, M. 2002. Archaeology and environment of the Dead Sea Plain: preliminary results of the second season of investigations by the joint La Trobe University/Arizona State University Project. Annual of the Department of Antiquities, Jordan 46:5192.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE. 1995. Rural responses to early urbanism: village and household economy at Tell el-Hayyat, Jordan. Journal of Field Archaeology 22(4):399419.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Fall, PL. 2006. Bronze Age Rural Ecology and Village Life at Tell el-Hayyat, Jordan. British Archaeological Reports, International Series 1586. Oxford: Archaeopress.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Fall, PL. 2009. Settling the valley: agrarian settlement and interaction along the Jordan Rift during the Bronze Age. In: Kaptijn E, Petit L, editors. A Timeless Vale: Archaeological and Related Essays on the Jordan Valley, Archaeological Studies, Leiden University 19. Leiden: Leiden University Press. p 97107.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Magness-Gardiner, B. 1989. Bronze Age Village Life in the Jordan Valley: archaeological investigations at Tell el-Hayyat and Tell Abu en-Ni‘aj. National Geographic Research 5(3):335347.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Savage, SH. 1995. Heartlands and hinterlands: alternative trajectories of early urbanization in Mesopotamia and the southern Levant. American Antiquity 60:3758.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Savage, SH. 2009. The Bronze Age political landscape of the southern Levant. In: Falconer SE, Redman CL, editors. Polities and Power: Archaeological Perspectives on the Landscapes of Early States. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. p 125151.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Fall, PL, Jones, JE. 1998. Winter 1996/97 excavations in the northern Jordan Valley: the Jordan Valley Village Project. American Journal of Archaeology 102(3):588589.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Fall, PL, Jones, JE. 2001. The Jordan Valley Village Project: excavations at Tell Abu en-Ni‘aj, 2000. American Journal of Archaeology 105(3):438439.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Fall, PL, Metzger, MC, Lines, L. 2004. Bronze Age rural economic transitions in the Jordan Valley. Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 58:117.Google Scholar
Falconer, SE, Fall, PL, Jones, JE. 2007. Life at the foundation of Bronze Age civilization: agrarian villages in the Jordan Valley. In: Levy TE, Daviau PMM, Younker RW, Shaer M, editors. Crossing Jordan: North American Contributions to the Archaeology of Jordan. London: Equinox. p 261268.Google Scholar
Fall, PL, Lines, L, Falconer, SE. 1998. Seeds of civilization: Bronze Age rural economy and ecology in the southern Levant. Annual of the Association of American Geographers 88:107125.Google Scholar
Fall, PL, Falconer, SE, Lines, L. 2002. Agricultural intensification and the secondary products revolution along the Jordan Rift. Human Ecology 30:445482.Google Scholar
Fall, PL, Falconer, SE, Edwards, PC. 2007. Living on the edge: settlement and abandonment on the Dead Sea Plain. In: Levy TE, Daviau PMM, Younker RW, Shaer M, editors. Crossing Jordan: North American Contributions to the Archaeology of Jordan. London: Equinox Publishing. p 225232.Google Scholar
Fischer, PM. 2006. The rise and fall of Middle and Late Bronze Age societies of Tell Abu al-Kharaz. In: Fischer PM, editor. The Chronology of the Jordan Valley during the Middle and Late Bronze Ages: Pella, Tell Abu al-Kharaz and Tell Deir Alla. Vienna: Contributions to the Chronology of the Eastern Mediterranean 12. p 59197.Google Scholar
Fischer, PM. 2014. The southern Levant (Transjordan) during the Late Bronze Age. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000–332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 561576.Google Scholar
Freundlich, J, Kuper, R, Breunig, P, Bertram, H-G. 1989. Radiocarbon dating of ostrich eggshells. Radiocarbon 31(3):10301034.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Garfinkel, Y, Cohen, S, editors. 2007. The Middle Bronze IIA cemetery at Gesher: final report. Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 62. Boston .Google Scholar
Genz, H. 2014. Excavations at Tell Fadous-Kfarabida 2004–2011: an Early and Middle Bronze Age site on the Lebanese coast. In: Höflmayer F, Eichmann R, editors. Egypt and the Southern Levant in the Early Bronze Age. Orient-Archäologie 31. Rahden: Verlag Marie Leidorf. p 6991.Google Scholar
Golani, A, Segal, D. 2002. Redefining the onset of the Early Bronze Age in Southern Canaan: new 14C evidence from Ashqelon Afridar. In: van den Brink E, Yannai E, editors. In Quest of Ancient Settlements and Landscapes. Tel Aviv: Ramot Publishing. p 135154.Google Scholar
Gophna, R. 1995. Early Bronze Age Canaan: some spatial and demographic observations. In: Levy TE, editor. The Archaeology of Society in the Holy Land. New York: Facts on File. p 269281.Google Scholar
Greenberg, R. 2002. Egypt, Beth Yerah and early Canaanite urbanization. In: Greenberg R, Early Urbanizations in the Levant: A Regional Narrative. London: Leicester University Press. p 213221.Google Scholar
Greenberg, R. 2014. Introduction to the Levant during the Early Bronze Age. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000–332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 269277.Google Scholar
Hedges, REM, Housley, RA, Bronk Ramsey, C, van Klinken, GJ. 1990. Radiocarbon dates from the Oxford AMS system: Archaeometry datelist 11. Archaeometry 32(2):211237.Google Scholar
Helbaek, H. 1958. Appendix A. Plant economy in ancient Lachish. In: Tufnell O, editor. Lachish: Tell Ed Duweir 4, the Bronze Age. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 309317.Google Scholar
Helms, SW. 1986. Excavations at Tell Umm Hammad, 1984. Levant 18:2550.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hillman, G. 1978. On the origins of domestic rye – Secale cereale: the finds from aceramic Can Hasan III in Turkey. Anatolian Studies 28:157174.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hubbard, RNLB. 1992. Dichotomous keys for the identification of the major Old World crops. Review of Palaeobotany and Palynology 73:109115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Höflmayer, F, Dee, MW, Genz, H, Riehl, S. 2014. Radiocarbon evidence for the Early Bronze Age Levant: the site of Tell Fadous-Kfarabida (Lebanon) and the end of the Early Bronze III period. Radiocarbon 56(2):529542.Google Scholar
Höflmayer, F, Kamlah, J, Sader, H, Dee, MW, Kutschera, W, Wild, AM, Riehl, S. 2016. New evidence for Middle Bronze Age chronology and synchronisms in the Levant: radiocarbon dates from Tell el-Burak, Tell el-Dab’a, and Tel Ifshar compared. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 375:5376.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holdorf, PS. 2010. Comparison of EB IV radiocarbon results from Khirbat Iskandar and Bab adh-Dhra. Final Report on the Early Bronze IV Area C Gateway and Cemeteries. Archaeological Expedition to Khirbat Iskandar and its Environs, Jordan, Volume 1. Boston: American Schools of Oriental Research. p 267–70.Google Scholar
Housley, RA. 1994. Eastern Mediterranean chronologies: the Oxford AMS contribution. In: Bar-Yosef O, Kra R, editors. Late Quaternary Chronology and Paleoclimates of the Eastern Mediterranean. Tucson: Radiocarbon. p 5573.Google Scholar
Ibrahim, M, Sauer, J, Yassine, K. 1976. The East Jordan Valley Survey, 1975. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 222:4166.Google Scholar
Jacomet, S. 2006. Identification of Cereal Remains from Archaeological Sites. 2nd edition. Basel: Archaeobotany Lab, IPAS, Basel University.Google Scholar
Joffe, A. 1993. Settlement and Society in the Early Bronze Age I and II, Southern Levant. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press.Google Scholar
Kennedy, MA. 2015. Assessing the Early Bronze-Middle Bronze Age transition in the Southern Levant in light of a transitional ceramic vessel from Tell Umm Hammad, Jordan. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 373:199216.Google Scholar
Klinge, J. 2013. Assessment of environmental change in the Near Eastern Bronze Age [PhD dissertation]. Tempe: Arizona State University. University Microfilms International, Ann Arbor.Google Scholar
Klinge, J, Fall, PL. 2010. Archaeobotanical inference of Bronze Age land use and land cover in the eastern Mediterranean. Journal of Archaeological Science 37:26222629.Google Scholar
Kramer, C. 1982. Village Ethnoarchaeology. Rural Iran in Archaeological Perspective. New York: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Kutschera, W, Bietak, M, Wild, EM, Bronk Ramsey, C, Dee, M, Golser, R, Kopetsky, K, Stadler, P, Seier, P, Thanheiser, U, Weninger, F. 2012. The chronology of Tell el-Daba: a crucial meeting point of 14C dating, archaeology, and Egyptology in the 2nd millennium BC. Radiocarbon 54(3–4):407422.Google Scholar
Lombardo, M, Piloto, A. 2000. Appendix D: new radiocarbon dates and assessment of all dates obtained for the Early and Middle Bronze ages in Jericho. In: Marchetti N, Nigro L, editors. Excavations at Jericho, 1998. Preliminary Report on the Second Season of Excavations and Surveys at Tell es-Sultan. Quaderni di Gerico 2. Rome: Università di Roma “La Sapienza.” p 329332.Google Scholar
Magness-Gardiner, B, Falconer, SE. 1994. Community, polity, and ritual in a Middle Bronze Age Levantine village. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 7(2):340.Google Scholar
Marcus, ES. 2003. Dating the Early Middle Bronze Age in the southern Levant: a preliminary comparison of radiocarbon and archaeo-historical synchronizations. In: Bietak M, editor. The Synchronisation of Civilisations in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Second Millennium B.C. II. Vienna: Verlag der Ostrreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. p 95110.Google Scholar
Marcus, ES. 2010. Appendix B: radiocarbon determinations from the Middle Bronze Age Jordan Valley. In: Maeir AM, editor. In the Midst of the Jordan (Jos 4:10): The Jordan Valley during the Middle Bronze Age (circa 2000–1500 BCE); Archaeological and Historical Correlates. Vienna: Osterreichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. p 243252.Google Scholar
Marcus, ES. 2013. Correlating and combining Egyptian historical and southern Levantine radiocarbon chronologies at Middle Bronze Age IIa Tel Ifshar, Israel. In: Shortland AJ, Bronk Ramsey C, editors. Radiocarbon and the Chronologies of Ancient Egypt. Oxford: Oxbow. p 182208.Google Scholar
Palumbo, G. 1991. The Early Bronze Age IV in the Southern Levant: Settlement Patterns, Economy and Material Culture of a “Dark Age.” Contributi Materiali di Archeologia Orientale III (1990). Rome: Universita Degli Studi di Roma la Sapienza.Google Scholar
Panitz-Cohen, N. 2014. The Southern Levant (Cisjordan) during the Late Bronze Age. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000–332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 541560.Google Scholar
Philip, G. 2003. The Early Bronze Age of the southern Levant: a landscape approach. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology 16(1):103132.Google Scholar
Philip, G. 2008. The Early Bronze I-III Age. In: Adams R, editor. The Archaeology of Jordan: A Reader. London: Equinox. p 161226.Google Scholar
Prag, K. 1986. The Intermediate Early Bronze-Middle Bronze Age sequences at Jericho and Tell Iktanu reviewed. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 264:6172.Google Scholar
Prag, K. 2001. The third millennium in Jordan: a perspective, past and future. In: al-Khraysheh F, editor. Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan, Volume 7. Amman: Department of Antiquities, Jordan. p 179190.Google Scholar
Prag, K. 2014. The southern Levant during the Intermediate Bronze Age. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000–332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 388400.Google Scholar
Rast, WE, Schaub, RT. 1980. Preliminary report of the 1979 expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 240:2161.Google Scholar
Rast, WE, Schaub, RT. 2003. Bâb edh-Dhrâ: Excavations at the Town Site (1975–1981). Eisenbrauns: Winona Lake.Google Scholar
Regev, J, de Miroschedji, P, Greenberg, R, Braun, E, Greenhut, Z, Boaretto, E. 2012a. Chronology of the Early Bronze Age in the southern Levant: new analysis for a high chronology. Radiocarbon 54(3–4):525566.Google Scholar
Regev, J, de Miroschedji, P, Boaretto, E. 2012b. Early Bronze Age chronology: radiocarbon dates and chronological models from Tel Yarmuth (Israel). Radiocarbon 54(3–4):505524.Google Scholar
Regev, J, Finkelstein, I, Adams, MJ, Boaretto, E. 2014. Wiggle-matched 14C chronology of Early Bronze Megiddo and the synchronization of Egyptian and Levantine chronologies. Agypten und Levante 24:243266.Google Scholar
Reimer, PJ, Bard, E, Bayliss, A, Beck, JW, Blackwell, PG, Bronk Ramsey, C, Buck, CE, Cheng, H, Edwards, RL, Friedrich, M, Grootes, PM, Guilderson, TP, Haflidason, H, Hajdas, I, Hatté, C, Heaton, TJ, Hoffmann, DL, Hogg, AG, Hughen, KA, Kaiser, KF, Kromer, B, Manning, SW, Niu, M, Reimer, RW, Richards, DA, Scott, EM, Southon, JR, Staff, RA, Turney, CSM, van der Plicht, J. 2013. IntCal13 and Marine13 radiocarbon age calibration curves 0–50,000 years cal BP. Radiocarbon 55(4):18691887.Google Scholar
Renfrew, JM. 1973. Palaeoethnobotany: The Prehistoric Food Plants of the Near East and Europe. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Richard, S. 2014. The southern Levant (Transjordan) during the Early Bronze Age. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000–332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 330352.Google Scholar
Savage, SH, Falconer, SE. 2003. Spatial and statistical inference of Late Bronze Age polities in the southern Levant. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 330:3145.Google Scholar
Segal, D, Carmi, I. 1996. Rehovot radiocarbon date list V. ‘Atiqot XXIX:79106.Google Scholar
Segal, D, Carmi, I. 2004. Rehovot radiocarbon date list VI. ‘Atiqot 48:123148.Google Scholar
Shai, I, Greenfield, HJ, Regev, J, Boaretto, E, Eliyahu-Behar, A, Maeir, AM. 2014. The Early Bronze Age remains at Tell es-Safi/Gath: an interim report. Tel Aviv 41(1):2049.Google Scholar
Sharon, I. 2014. Levantine chronology. In: Steiner ML, Killebrew AE, editors. The Archaeology of the Levant c. 8000–332 BCE. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p 4465.Google Scholar
Stager, LE. 1992. The periodization of Palestine from Neolithic through Early Bronze Age times. In: Ehrich RW, editor. Chronologies in Old World Archaeology, 3rd edition. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Volume 1:2241; Volume 2:17–60.Google Scholar
Strange, J. 2000. The Palestinian city-states of the Bronze Age. In: Hansen MH, editor. A Comparative Study of Thirty City-State Cultures: An Investigation Conducted by the Copenhagen Polis Centre. Copenhagen: C A Reitzels Forlag. p 6776.Google Scholar
Thalmann, J-P. 2006. Tell Arqa – I. Les niveaux de l’age du Bronze. Volume 1. Beirut: Institut Francais du Proche-Orient.Google Scholar
Thalmann, J-P. 2008. Tell Arqa et Byblos, essai de correlation. In: Bietak M, Czerny E, editors. The Bronze Age in the Lebanon. Studies on the Archaeology and Chronology of Lebanon, Syria and Egypt . Vienna: Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. p 6178.Google Scholar
van Zeist, W. 1976. On macroscopic traces of food plants in southwestern Asia (with some reference to pollen data). Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society London B 275:2741.Google Scholar
van Zeist, W, Bakker-Heeres, JAH. 1982. Archaeobotanical studies in the Levant. 1. Neolithic sites in the Damascus basin: Aswad, Ghoraife, Ramad. Palaeohistoria 24:165256.Google Scholar
Vogel, JC, Visser, E, Fuls, A. 2001. Suitability of ostrich eggshell for radiocarbon dating. Radiocarbon 43(1):133137.Google Scholar
Weinstein, JM. 1984. Radiocarbon dating in the southern Levant. Radiocarbon 26(3):297366.Google Scholar
Zohary, D, Hopf, M. 1973. Domestication of pulses in the Old World. Science 182(4115):887894.Google Scholar
Zohary, D, Spiegel-Roy, P. 1975. Beginnings of fruit growing in the Old World. Science 187(4174):319327.Google Scholar