Evidence of Early Forms of Pottery Production and 8,000-Year-Old Buildings Belonging to the Elite of the Time Discovered
Archaeologists from the University of Udine have uncovered two ancient human settlements in the Rovia sub-district of Dohuk province in Iraqi Kurdistan, thought to date back some 8,000 years. The discovery took place at the site of Kanispan, a Neolithic settlement from the 7th millennium BC.
The provinces Director of Antiques and Heritage, Bekas Brifkani, told Shafaq News Agency that the sites were discovered in Asinkran and Kanisban areas, located in the Nafkor plain near the Rovia district in eastern Duhok.
Important information about the earliest agricultural societies and how they evolved into more complex communities has been uncovered by these excavations, which were conducted as part of the Asingeran Excavation Project in cooperation with the Directorate of Antiquities of Dohuk.
The project, coordinated by Marco Iamoni, is part of the Humanities and Cultural Heritage Department of the University of Udine. The information obtained in Asingeran and the new Kanispan site is exceptional, emphasizes Professor Iamoni, lecturer in Archaeology and Art History of Ancient Western Asia and the Eastern Mediterranean.
Some of the oldest methods of grain processing and pottery making, which date back more than 8,000 years, were found in Asinkran. Meanwhile, evidence of early agricultural specialization and craft production was discovered at the Kanisban site, a Neolithic settlement from the 7th millennium BCE.
Late Chalcolithic kiln at the Asingeran site, view from the north. Credit: University of Udine
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