Digging water pipes, discovering 2,100-year-old 'time-frozen' treasure

An unparalleled, extremely valuable archaeological treasure has just been found in Israel, where most of the artifacts are preserved in extremely good condition and contain a lot of valuable information.

According to Live Science, it's a 2,100-year-old ranch that was suddenly abandoned, possibly to flee an invasion by forces of the ancient Hasmonean Kingdom.

Archaeologist Amani Abu-Hamid, lead researcher from the Israel Antiquities Authority (IAA), describes it as a perfectly "frozen" "time capsule".

Picture 1 of Digging water pipes, discovering 2,100-year-old 'time-frozen' treasure
Site of excavation of "treasure farm" in Israel

Artifacts were found to be still unfinished activities of people who "evaporated" 2,100 years ago, with ancient jars intact, scales for weaving looms dangling from shelves.

With age and preservation, the things that exist on this ancient farm are of unparalleled value.

The team also found agricultural tools such as picks and scythes made of iron, and coins dating back to the 2nd century BC.

The items don't tell much about daily life on the farm, according to the IAA, but the unusually high number of looms suggest weaving was a major occupation here, so the farm may have once raised a lot of animals. many sheep.

Excavations have also revealed traces of overlapping settlements in the area, including foundations of buildings and ceramic vases dating from the 9th to 10th centuries BC. Time of Israel.

The ceramics are dated according to the style of the making, while the organic materials have revealed their age through radiocarbon-14 dating.

Archaeologists stumbled across this great "world of treasures" at a site called Horbat Assad, east of the Sea of ​​Galilee, during pre-construction surveys for a valuable water pipeline project. $270 million from the Mediterranean coast. The new pipeline is part of a desalination project that supplies fresh water to farmland in Israel and neighboring countries.