Ras El Kelb

Ras El Kelb
Location 8 km (5 mi) from Beirut, Lebanon
Type Cave
Part of Settlement
History
Material Limestone
Founded c. 50,000 BC
Periods Paleolithic
Cultures Mousterian
Site notes
Excavation dates 1959
Archaeologists Dorothy Garrod, G Henri-Martin,
Public access Yes

Ras El Kelb is a truncated, seaside cave and Paleolithic settlement located on the low-lying (5 m) coast of Lebanon, 8 kilometres (5 mi) north of Beirut. It is one of the oldest habitations found in the country.[1]

Rescue excavations were carried out in 1959 by Dorothy Garrod and G. Henri-Martin.[2] They dug 2 trenches named the 'Rail' and 'Tunnel' trenches, from which they recovered over 30,000 flint artefacts of a wide variety for statistical analysis from 22 geological layers.[3] It was concluded that the sea had passed the level of the cave 3 times since its first dated inhabitation around 50,000 BC (52,000 B.P.).[4]

They also discovered a tooth suggested to belong to a Neanderthal. It was suggested that the inhabitants were expert at hunting gazelle using the flints recovered.[5]

References

  1. Copeland, Lorraine and Moloney, Norah (eds) (1998) The Mousterian Site of Ras el-Kelb, Lebanon BAR IS 706. ISBN 0-86054-939-9
  2. Garrod, D. and Henri-Martin, G., Fouilles a Ras el-Kelb, Liban, 1959. Actes du 16eme Congres Prehistorique de France, Monaco, 1959.
  3. Garrod, D. and Henri-Martin, G., Rapport Preliminaire sur la fouille d'une grotte a Ras el Kelb, Liban, 1959, Bulletin du Musee de Beyrouth, XVI : 61-7, 1961.
  4. Garrod, D., The Middle Paleolithic of the near East and the Problems of Mount-Carmel Man., Journal of the Royal Anthropological Society, 92 : 232-51, 1962.
  5. Copeland, Lorraine., The Middle Paleolithic of Adlun and Ras El Kelb (Lebanon): First results from a study of the flint industries, pp. 33-57, Paleorient, Volume 4, Number 4, 1978.

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