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Archaeology of Oman

The present-day Sultanate of Oman lies in the south-eastern Arabian Peninsula. There are different definitions for Oman: traditional Oman includes the present-day United Arab Emirates (U.A.E.), though its prehistoric remains differ in some respects from the more specifically defined Oman proper, which corresponds roughly with the present-day central provinces of the Sultanate. In the north, the Oman Peninsula is more specific, and juts into the Strait of Hormuz. The archaeology of southern Oman Dhofar develops separately from that of central and northern Oman.

table of the chronology for the archaeology of Central Oman.

Different ages are reflected in typological assemblages, Old Stone (Paleolithic) Age, New Stone (Neolithic) Age, Copper Age, Bronze Age, Early Iron Age, Late Iron Age, and the Age of Islam. A "period" is an inferred classification from recurring artifact assemblages, sometimes associated with cultures. Ages, on the other hand, are on a much larger scale; they are conventional, but difficult to date absolutely—partially due to different rates of regional development. A barometer of transition is the amount of industry and manufacturing going on, particularly that of copper—refused as slag—and other metallic artifacts. The absolute dates for the different periods are still under study and it is difficult to assign years to the Late Iron Age of central and southern Oman. Even major monuments have been dated variously, spanning millennia. (moved from the last paragraph)

Archaeologically speaking, differences increase between the area of the present-day U.A.E. and the Sultanate particularly toward the end of the Early Iron Age, conditioned locally by the different geographical situations. The amount of moisture dictates the carrying capacity of the area, with a variety of subsistence strategies used to exploit the available resources. Since archaeological field work began in the early 1970s, numerous teams have worked in the Sultanate.

Paleolithic edit

The Paleolithic age ranges from 3 million to about 10,000 years ago, with human occupation outside of Africa beginning about 100,000 years ago,[1] bringing their ways of life with them. Theories state that the Nubian Tool Complex (c. 128,000-74,000 years ago) spread from Africa to the Arabian Peninsula during the Late Pleistocene, via the Red Sea. This theory was headed by the Dhofar Archaeological Project (DAP) in 2010 to 2011, when they surveyed and discovered Levalloisian cores—a recognizable type of the complex—Wadi Abyut, central Dhofar. The team had ruled that the Nubian Complex only extended into Western Oman.[2]

A slightly more recent series of surveys, the French Mission of Adam conducted from 2007 to 2013, found numerous lithic artifacts scattered about many hills in the Adam area, specifically in the Sufrat Valley. They dated the finds, based on typo-technological traits to mostly the Middle and Upper Paleolithic. Levalloisian, wa'shah, laminar, and bifacial lithic remains were primary tool types found.[3]

Neolithic edit

The Neolithic Age coincides with the beginning of the Holocene and sees the advent of a food producing, or agricultural, society, as opposed to hunting and gathering; it ranges loosely from about 10,000-3,500 BCE. The process was slightly different in the Arabian Peninsula; as animal husbandry was first to arise in 5500 BCE in the area of Oman and agriculture did not arise until the early Bronze Age. Rather, fishing became more diversified and tools more specialized; about 80% of the bone assemblage at Ra's al-Hamra' specifically was fish, mostly made up by larger fish caught with things like nets and line fishing—determined by a collection of fishhooks and net-sinkers.[4][5]

Key sites on the Western Coast include shell middens at Ra's al-Ḥamrā' and Suwayh—where indication of some mother-of-pearl fishhooks were located[5]--, Ra's al-Ḥadd, Ra's Dah, and Maṣīrah. Their middens were dated using radiocarbon techniques and dated circa the middle of the fifth to the third millennium BCE. Several sites exhibited evidence of structures; semi-circular or circular constructions delineated by postholes, hearths, and middens. Some of these middens also held human burials, which of course contained grave goods mostly consisting of simple jewelry.[4] Beads from shells are found all up and down the coast into the UAE. Though certain types of shells which are not naturally occurring in the UAE are found in jewelry there, indicating that there was some sort of trade between communities in Oman, where there shells occurred, and communities in the UAE.[5]

In 2010, the French Mission of Adam located Jabal al-'Aluya; an in-land site with 127 structural remains of varying shapes and compositions, supposed to be hut-like dwellings, hearths, and graves—similar to those discussed above. Of the lithic assemblage found, cores were fairly rare, with mostly blades and laminar flakes being observed. The site is associated with the latter part of 4000 BCE.[6]

A site named Al-Dahariz 2, located in the Dhofar governance, has been found to contain fluted-point lithics—a form before thought to be unique to the Americas. The fluted technology has a large, linear chunk taken out from the bottom or top of the lithic, creating a lighter projectile that can keep its sharpness. However, the current theory is that the lithics were non-functional and actually communicated cultural value and exhibited the skill of the craftsperson.[7]

Copper Age edit

The Copper Age in this geographic location partially coincides with the Hafit Period (3100-2700 BCE),[8] known originally from a cemetery site on the Jebel Hafit in the UAE, though attributed artifacts extend well into the Sultanate. Most burials are located on hill sides, with deposits of supposed pottery imports from southern Mesopotamia. Such finds have been documented on the eastern coast of the Sultanate near Ra's al-Hadd, especially HD-6 and Ra's al-Jinz. Also present in the tombs was diagnostic pottery of Jemdet Nasr period type.[9] As for copper, crucibles with metal traces, small furnaces, and about 300 copper tools were found at Ras al-Jinz.[10]

Copper smelting began perhaps at al-Batina,[9] however such ores would leave little slag and the process did not require special conditions, so there would be little to indicate its presence in the archaeological record. Already at this time there is textual evidence from Sumer for international trade in copper and other commodities, probably from Oman.[11]

 
Tomb at Shir of the Umm an-Nar Period.

Bronze Age edit

The Bronze Age typically ranges from 3300 to 1300 BCE, encompassing part of the Hafit period (3100-2700 BCE) and the Umm al-Nar (2700-2000 BCE) and Wadi Suq Periods (2000 - 1300 BCE).[8]

Early Bronze Age edit

During this age, metal production increased considerably in relation to that of the preceding Hafit Period, with several plano-convex copper ingots, weighing 1–2 kg, being found. Tower or beehive tombs, such as those at Shir, can only be approximately dated, and may date to the Hafit or Umm al-Nar Periods.[12] During the Umm al-Nar Period, large communal, free-standing tombs contain numerous interments and were more common. Other tombs are smaller and may contain one or a few interments.

Similar tombs to those at Shir appear in the area of Shenah, which is already slightly famous for its rock-art sites. A 2006 survey counted 325 beehive tombs, dating from the late fourth to the early third millennium. They either have single or double stacked walls of mostly limestone or sandstone, with short, rectangular entrances that face the East. All of them built directly on top of the bedrock, with no indication of any digging before building took place.[13]

The site known as Al-Khashbah, was the focus of a surveying project by the University of Tübingen in 2015. The various pedestrian surveys found slag and metal objects, furnace fragments, stone vessels, jewelry, stone tools, and glass objects. They located approximately 200 tombs and 10 monumental structures that could be dated to circa the 3rd millennium BCE, with some more specifically dating to the earlier Hafit period and others dating to the later Umm al-Nar period. Some of these monumental structures were towers with some evidence for copper processing; as some scholars have suggested that various stone tools—not just classical anvils and pounding stones—played important roles in the process of beneficiation of copper. However, some other buildings had indications of flint knapping.[8]

In 1982, a potsherd attributed to the Indus Valley Civilization was found at Ras al-Jinz, located at the easternmost point of the Arabian Peninsula. It was considered landmark proof that at least coastal Oman was connected to India in the third millennium BCE.[10][14] Also found there, were pieces of bitumen impressed with what appeared to be ropes, reed mats, and wood planks, with a few of the fragments still housing barnacles; implying it was caulking for an early boat.[10]

In Dhofār weapons came to light in a confirmed grave context datable to the 3rd millennium BCE.[15]

Late Bronze Age edit

The Late Bronze Age is mostly represented by grave goods and excavated settlements. It includes the last 200, 1500 to 1300 BCE, years of the Wadi Suq period.[16][17]

Of the structures found Al-Khashbah, only six tombs, all of them subterranean, could be dated to the 2nd millennium and the Wadi Suq period.[8]

Iron Age edit

 
Northern face of the Jebel Radhania (or Ruwadhah), on top of which the Early Iron Age Lizq fort, L1, was built.

The Iron Age is divided into two different periods, 'Iron Age A' (1300-300 BCE) and 'Iron Age B' (325 BCE-650 CE).[18]

Early Iron Age edit

Known from different cemetery and copper producing sites, especially the fort on the Jebel Radhania, Lizq and the fort at Salut. the Early Iron Age is generally accepted as lasting from 1300 to 300 BCE. This period is known from some 142 archaeological sites located in the eastern part of the U.A.E. as well as the central and northern parts of the Sultanate of Oman. One scholar in particular offered concrete argumentation for a gradual transition as a model from the Early to Late Iron Ages at certain sites in Central Oman.[19] However, graves goods show no similarities between the two periods.

Usually hand-made and hard-fired, the pottery from the Lizq fort is most similar to that from the latest Early Iron Age sites at al-Moyassar (or al-Maysar) and Samad al-Shan. In terms of pottery chronology, its beginnings there are obscure.[20]

The dead are interred in existing subterranean tombs or in new, hut-like free-standing ones. All of the tombs of given group may be oriented in one direction, however, different groups deviate from each other. The inhabitants must have considered their society to be a safe one since they built such visible and vulnerable free-standing tombs with poor chances of survival and as a ready source of building materials have rapidly disappeared since 1980. No intact tomb of this period has ever been excavated.

 
Orthographic view of an Early Iron Age hut tomb at Bilād al-Maʿdin in eastern Oman.

The number of copper-alloy artifacts reaches a peak at this time which will only be surpassed around the 9th century CE. The reason is that the technology to roast the more abundant sulfidic copper ore was developed. A hoard of over 500 copper alloy artifacts at ʿIbrī/Selme gives a fair idea of the production at this time. In 2012, another copper and iron metal-working workshop came to light first reported incorrectly as at 'al-Saffah', when in reality this site is known as ʿUqdat al-Bakrah. More than 400 metallic artifacts often found close shape correspondences with those from ʿIbrī/Selme.[21]

An important connection with the outside world comes to bear in a cuneiform inscription (640 BCE) of the Neo-Assyrian king Assurbanipal; he mentions emissaries sent by a king by the name of Pade who resides in Izki in the land of Qade.[22] It yielded to date nearly 700 metallic artifacts. The introduction of the falaj for irrigation coincides with the rapid growth of date as a main crop. The chronology for this age resembles but also differs from the better known one of the present-day U.A.E. During this Iron Age paradoxically in Oman iron artifacts are rather rare, although in neighbouring Iran after 1200 BCE iron weapons are characteristic. Pre-Arabic place-names such as Nizwa, Izki, Rustaq and ʿIbri probably represent the bare remnants of the language and speakers of this and the next age.[23]

In November, 2019, 45 well-preserved tombs covering a 50-80 square metre area and a settlement, dating back to beginning of the Iron Age, were discovered in Al-Mudhaibi by archaeologists from Oman and Heidelberg University. Archaeologists believed that the site was inhabited by the miners of the nearby copper.[24]

Samad Late Iron Age edit

At the end of the Early Iron Age—after some 200–300 years without absolutely dated archaeological contexts—weak evidence appears for the Samad Late Iron Age from <100 BCE to 300 CE, as dated by thermoluminescence and a few outside artifact comparisons. This assemblage is known from 13 possible and 74 more certainly attributed archaeological sites in 30 localities. Evidence for a transition from the EIA (Early Iron Age) is rare in eastern Oman and the chronological situation is clearest at the multi-period site complex at al-Moyassar, where falaj water sites from the EIA, LIA (Late Iron Age), and medieval periods survive to this day. Over the centuries, and especially recently, the water table dropped, so that the falaj floor had to be lowered to the height of the water table.[25] This period was witness to a drastic reduction in population for reasons unknown. Evident during this period is also a loss of copper producing technology.

 
Eastern Oman, Late Iron Age sites

Samad LIA sites scatter over an estimated 17,000 km2 (6,600 sq mi) bordered to the west in Izkī, to the north in the capital area, to the south Jaʿlān, and to the east at the coast.[26] An assemblage attributable to the Samad period is absent in the Bāṭinah[27] and is limited basically to the Sharqīyah province. Samad al-Shan and smaller sites, such as al-Akhdhar, al-Amqat, Bawshar[28] and al-Bustan, are type-sites for this non-writing population, with mostly hand-made pottery, copper-alloy, and iron artefacts. Reoccurring pottery wares and shapes, small finds, as well as a few grave structure types define the Samad Late Iron Age assemblage.[29][30]

Where the soil is deep enough, individual stone-built graves are sunk into the earth. Such classical Samad graves have a low wall on the roof near the north-western end perpendicular to the long axis. They contain flexed skeletons, with the men usually are placed on the right side and the women usually on the left, their heads generally point toward the south-east.

Few fragmentary settlements—Mahaliya, al-Nejd, Nejd Madirah, Qaryat al-Saiḥ in Wadi Maḥram, Samad al-Shan sites S1, S7, ʿUmq al-Rabaḫ, Ṭīwī site TW2—have been documented.

 
Imported Abiel tetradrachm found in the Late Iron Age settlement al-Nejd in eastern Oman.

No coins were struck locally, and to date only two examples have turned up in contexts together with Samad Late Iron Age pottery, while the northern part of traditional Oman had at least partly a currency economy, Central Oman did not.

In the LIA a few glazed pottery imports derive from the upper Gulf and southern Mesopotamia. One class of pottery, balsamaria are wheel-turned and also are common in the late Pre-Islamic Late Iron Age graves in both areas of Oman. Approximately 3/4 of the find inventories in Central Oman finds are attributable to the Samad assemblage, far fewer to the recent pre-Islamic period, and a few cannot be attributed to a definable assemblage. Persian Achaemenid, Parthian, and Sasanian dominance of Oman is firmly entrenched in the secondary literature; thus, it is easy to criticize the integrity of the definition of the Samad assemblage.

Parthian, and later Sasanian, invaders from Iran temporarily dominated certain towns[31] politically and militarily, but for logistical reasons, it was only possible to occupy a few sites, as occurred during later invasions.[32] Persian presence is inferred by a few place-names near or on the coast (e.g. al-Rustaq) and personal names in Izki.[33] It appears that, at this time in Central Oman, so-called Modern South Arabian languages were spoken. For the Early Iron Age this is far less certain. From ±500 BCE to ±500 CE or later, waves of migratory tribes from South and Central Arabia settle in south-eastern Arabia and Iran, as we know from oral historical sources. If so, then at least at first linguistically such populations were South Arabians and not Arabs. The tribal grounds of the Azd tribes in south-eastern Arabia of course are far larger and more diverse than the area of the Samad Late Iron Age sites. To judge from the Samad stone graves and from evidence about their diet, this was not Bedouin population, but rather consisted of farmers.

These tribes brought the South Arabian, later Arabic, linguistic variety with them as far east as Khorasan in Iran. However, Omani Arabic has its own words and is not just an import from Central Arabia.[34] It is assumed that Classical Arabic arrived with the Arab diaspora and Islam in the 7th and 8th centuries CE, first to the metropolitan centres. The occurrence in Arabia and the Red Sea littoral of ribbed amphorae manufactured in Aqaba/Ayla evidently in order to transport wine, shows the area just north of Aqaba to have been a fruitful agricultural area from 400 up to possibly 1000. On the other hand, Dr. Fleitmann has studied stalagmites from al-Hutah Cave in central Oman and has gathered information for a series of megadroughts especially around 530 CE. These may have afflicted the entire Peninsula.[35]

non-Samad Late Iron Age edit

 
A trilith at the site near al-Jawābī in the Ṣūr Wilayat.

Several Late Iron Age sites do not link in terms of form and details of manufacture of their artifacts with the Samad characteristic assemblage. For example, the weapons are differently fashioned, as in one grave at Bawshar.[36] Curiously, some of the monuments previously described as megalithic,[37] are now described as 'small stone monuments'.[38] The term megalith has been used and misused in a wide variety of meanings; triliths found in Oman differ from ones in Europe in size and shape. The most important example are triliths (Arab. ʿathfiya/ʿathāfy) - rowed groups of three stones perched together to form a steep pyramid. A fourth stone may lie horizontally on top. Triliths usually lie in wadis, the main habitation area of nomads.[39] Scholars have suggested a connection between the speakers of the Modern South Arabian Language, Mahra, and the triliths.[40][41][42][43] To judge from Mehra place-names and the triliths, Mahri speakers lived further to the north until Bedouin tribes pushed them into the south.[44] The triliths are the only find-category that central and southern Oman hold in common. A connection with Ṧḥahrī/Ǧibbāli is also plausible since triliths lie in areas in which today this language group still is actively spoken.

[45][46][47]

The Pre-Islamic recent period[48] is known from different sites in the Sultanate, for example probably ʿAmlāʾ/Amlah, al-Fuwaydah. Such sites are largely contemporary with Late Iron Age of Samad in Central Oman, especially in the Sharqiyah. In the U.A.E. such show evidence of writing such as on coins. Regarding the relative chronology of the two there is considerable consensus. However, a difficulty in order to build a chronology lies in the lack of clear artefactual parallels between the Samad assemblage and that of these sites. At the partially excavated cemetery site of al-Fuwaydah the artifacts, especially pottery and metalwork, are more similar to contemporary ones from the U.A.E. than to those of Samad.[49]

Iron Age in Dhofar edit

 
Sherd of medieval pottery from Khor Rori in southern Oman

Various survey and a few excavations have shed light on the archaeology of the South Province of the Sultanate;[50] the largest and best-known site is Khor Rori, a trading fort established by the Hadhramite kingdom in the 3rd century BCE.[51] While this site shows a mixture of artifacts, many of which are of Old South Arabian type, the surrounding countryside reveals a mélange of different kinds of artifacts. Khor Rori owes its existence to the trading of aromatics, in particular frankincense.[52] The type of sherd depicted was for many years considered to be Late Iron Age, but recent research re-dates it to the medieval period.

Islamic Age edit

Very little archaeological evidence from the early Islamic Age exists; the earliest building structures which survive date to medieval times. With the coming of Islam and the diaspora of Arabian tribes, the Arabic language took hold in Oman.

Copper production reaches a record high to judge from the amount of slag which has survived from 150 known smelting sites.[53] With 100,000 tons of slag, Lasail, or more properly, al-Azayl, in Wadi Jizzi is the largest smelting site in Oman.[54][55] The slag showed that the hill was mined away and processed in nearby furnaces, with part of the work also being carried out underground. Wooden supports found 40 meters underground marked evidence of the underground work, with theories supposing that the tunnels caved in. A similar site, Semdah, was undermined and over-exploited, thus a cave in occurred.[56]

Sources edit

  • Michel Mouton, La péninsule d’Oman de la fin de l’âge du fer au début de la période sasanide (250 av. – 350 ap. JC), 1992, BAR International Series 1776, (printed 2008).
  • Daniel T. Potts, The Persian Gulf in Antiquity, 2 vols., Oxford 1992
  • Paul Yule, Cross-roads – Early and Late Iron Age South-eastern Arabia, Abhandlungen Deutsche Orient-Gesellschaft, vol. 30, Wiesbaden 2014, ISBN 978-3-447-10127-1, E-Book: ISBN 978-3-447-19287-3.

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  37. ^ Walter Dostal, Zur Megalithenfrage in Südarabien, in Festschrift Werner Caskel..., Brill, Leiden, 1968, 53-61
  38. ^ Abdalaziz Ja’afar bin ‘Aqil & Joy McCorriston, Prehistoric small scale monument types in Hadramawt (southern Arabia): convergences in ethnography, linguistics and archaeology, Antiquity 83, 2009, 602-18
  39. ^ Cf. Jörg Janzen, Die Nomaden Dhofars/Sultanat Oman traditional Lebensformen im Wandel, Bamberg, 1980 ISSN 0344-6557
  40. ^ Walter Dostal, Die Beduinen in Südarabien. Eine ethnologische Studie zur Entwicklung der Kamelhirtenkultur in Arabien, Vienna, 1967
  41. ^ Paul Yule, Late Pre-Islamic Oman: The Inner Evidence – The Outside View, in: M. Hoffmann-Ruf–A. al-Salami (eds.), Studies on Ibadism and Oman, Oman and Overseas, vol. 2, Hildesheim, 2013, 13–33, ISBN 978-3-487-14798-7
  42. ^ Michael J. Harrower, Matthew J. Senn and Joy McCorriston, Tombs, triliths and oases: spatial analysis of the Arabian human social dynamics (AHSD) project, archaeological survey 2009-2010, Journal Oman Stud. 18, 2014, 145-151 ISSN 0378-8180
  43. ^ Juris Zarins, The Land of Incense, Archaeological Work in the Governorate of Dhofar, Sultanate of Oman 1990–1995, Sultan Qaboos University Publications, Archaeology & Cultural Heritage Series, vol. 1, Muscat, 2001, 134-5 fig. 65 map
  44. ^ Dostal 1967, 184-8; W. Müller, Mahra, Encyclopedia of Islam, v. 6, 1991, 82
  45. ^ Ali Aḥmad Maḥāsh al-Shaḥrī, Grave types and "triliths" in Dhofar, Arab. Archaeol. Epigraphy 2, 1991, 190-193 ISSN 0905-7196
  46. ^ Ali Ahmad Mahash al-Shahri, kayfa btadaynt wa-kayfa rtaqaynā bi-l-ḥaḍāra l-ʾinsāniyya min šibh al-žazīra l-ʿarabiyya Ẓafār kitābātuhā wa-nuqušuhā l-qadīma ʾaṭ-ṭabʿūlā, Dubai 1994, pages 273-4 figs. 248-251
  47. ^ Ali Ahmad Mahash al-Shahri, The Language of Aad, Dubai 2000, 188-9 figs.
  48. ^ Michel Mouton, La péninsule d’Oman de la fin de l’âge du fer au début de la période sasanide (250 av. – 350 ap. JC), BAR International Series 1776, 1992 (printed 2008) ISBN 978-1-4073-0264-5
  49. ^ Paul Alan Yule, ʿAmlah, al-Zahirah (Sultanat Oman) – späteisenzeitliche Gräberfelder 1997, in: Paul Yule (ed.), Studies in the archaeology of the Sultanate of Oman, Orient-Archäologie 2, Rahden, 1999, 119–186 ISBN 3-89646-632-1
  50. ^ Juris Zarins, The Land of Incense. Archaeological Work in the Governorate of Dhofar, Sultanate of Oman 1990-1995, Muscat 2001 [ISBN unspecified]
  51. ^ A. Avanzini, A Port in Arabia between Rome and the Indian Ocean (3rd century BC – 5th century AD), Rome 2008, ISBN 978-88-8265-469-6
  52. ^ W. W. Müller, Weihrauch, in: Paulys Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft, vol. 15, Munich 1978, 699-777
  53. ^ Gerd Weisgerber, Die Suche nach dem altsumerischen Kupferland Makan, Das Altertum37, 1991, 76-90.
  54. ^ G. W. Goettler, N. Firth, C. C. Huston, A preöiminary discussion of ancient min ing in the Sultanate of Oman, Jour. Oman Stud. 2, 1976, 44
  55. ^ Gerd Weisgerber, Mehr als Kupfer in Oman, Der Anschnitt, 5-6, 1981, 184-5 fig. 7.
  56. ^ Weisgerber, Gerd (1980). "PATTERNS OF EARLY ISAMIC METALLURGY IN OMAN". Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Seminar. 10 (Proceedings of the Thirteenth SEMINAR FOR ARABIAN STUDIES held at the Middle East Centre, Cambridge). Archaeopress: 115–126 – via JSTOR.

External links edit

  • University of Heidelberg
  • heidICON

See also edit

archaeology, oman, present, sultanate, oman, lies, south, eastern, arabian, peninsula, there, different, definitions, oman, traditional, oman, includes, present, united, arab, emirates, though, prehistoric, remains, differ, some, respects, from, more, specific. The present day Sultanate of Oman lies in the south eastern Arabian Peninsula There are different definitions for Oman traditional Oman includes the present day United Arab Emirates U A E though its prehistoric remains differ in some respects from the more specifically defined Oman proper which corresponds roughly with the present day central provinces of the Sultanate In the north the Oman Peninsula is more specific and juts into the Strait of Hormuz The archaeology of southern Oman Dhofar develops separately from that of central and northern Oman table of the chronology for the archaeology of Central Oman Different ages are reflected in typological assemblages Old Stone Paleolithic Age New Stone Neolithic Age Copper Age Bronze Age Early Iron Age Late Iron Age and the Age of Islam A period is an inferred classification from recurring artifact assemblages sometimes associated with cultures Ages on the other hand are on a much larger scale they are conventional but difficult to date absolutely partially due to different rates of regional development A barometer of transition is the amount of industry and manufacturing going on particularly that of copper refused as slag and other metallic artifacts The absolute dates for the different periods are still under study and it is difficult to assign years to the Late Iron Age of central and southern Oman Even major monuments have been dated variously spanning millennia moved from the last paragraph Archaeologically speaking differences increase between the area of the present day U A E and the Sultanate particularly toward the end of the Early Iron Age conditioned locally by the different geographical situations The amount of moisture dictates the carrying capacity of the area with a variety of subsistence strategies used to exploit the available resources Since archaeological field work began in the early 1970s numerous teams have worked in the Sultanate Contents 1 Paleolithic 2 Neolithic 3 Copper Age 4 Bronze Age 4 1 Early Bronze Age 4 2 Late Bronze Age 5 Iron Age 5 1 Early Iron Age 5 2 Samad Late Iron Age 5 3 non Samad Late Iron Age 5 3 1 Iron Age in Dhofar 6 Islamic Age 7 Sources 8 References 9 External links 10 See alsoPaleolithic editThe Paleolithic age ranges from 3 million to about 10 000 years ago with human occupation outside of Africa beginning about 100 000 years ago 1 bringing their ways of life with them Theories state that the Nubian Tool Complex c 128 000 74 000 years ago spread from Africa to the Arabian Peninsula during the Late Pleistocene via the Red Sea This theory was headed by the Dhofar Archaeological Project DAP in 2010 to 2011 when they surveyed and discovered Levalloisian cores a recognizable type of the complex Wadi Abyut central Dhofar The team had ruled that the Nubian Complex only extended into Western Oman 2 A slightly more recent series of surveys the French Mission of Adam conducted from 2007 to 2013 found numerous lithic artifacts scattered about many hills in the Adam area specifically in the Sufrat Valley They dated the finds based on typo technological traits to mostly the Middle and Upper Paleolithic Levalloisian wa shah laminar and bifacial lithic remains were primary tool types found 3 Neolithic editThe Neolithic Age coincides with the beginning of the Holocene and sees the advent of a food producing or agricultural society as opposed to hunting and gathering it ranges loosely from about 10 000 3 500 BCE The process was slightly different in the Arabian Peninsula as animal husbandry was first to arise in 5500 BCE in the area of Oman and agriculture did not arise until the early Bronze Age Rather fishing became more diversified and tools more specialized about 80 of the bone assemblage at Ra s al Hamra specifically was fish mostly made up by larger fish caught with things like nets and line fishing determined by a collection of fishhooks and net sinkers 4 5 Key sites on the Western Coast include shell middens at Ra s al Ḥamra and Suwayh where indication of some mother of pearl fishhooks were located 5 Ra s al Ḥadd Ra s Dah and Maṣirah Their middens were dated using radiocarbon techniques and dated circa the middle of the fifth to the third millennium BCE Several sites exhibited evidence of structures semi circular or circular constructions delineated by postholes hearths and middens Some of these middens also held human burials which of course contained grave goods mostly consisting of simple jewelry 4 Beads from shells are found all up and down the coast into the UAE Though certain types of shells which are not naturally occurring in the UAE are found in jewelry there indicating that there was some sort of trade between communities in Oman where there shells occurred and communities in the UAE 5 In 2010 the French Mission of Adam located Jabal al Aluya an in land site with 127 structural remains of varying shapes and compositions supposed to be hut like dwellings hearths and graves similar to those discussed above Of the lithic assemblage found cores were fairly rare with mostly blades and laminar flakes being observed The site is associated with the latter part of 4000 BCE 6 A site named Al Dahariz 2 located in the Dhofar governance has been found to contain fluted point lithics a form before thought to be unique to the Americas The fluted technology has a large linear chunk taken out from the bottom or top of the lithic creating a lighter projectile that can keep its sharpness However the current theory is that the lithics were non functional and actually communicated cultural value and exhibited the skill of the craftsperson 7 Copper Age editThe Copper Age in this geographic location partially coincides with the Hafit Period 3100 2700 BCE 8 known originally from a cemetery site on the Jebel Hafit in the UAE though attributed artifacts extend well into the Sultanate Most burials are located on hill sides with deposits of supposed pottery imports from southern Mesopotamia Such finds have been documented on the eastern coast of the Sultanate near Ra s al Hadd especially HD 6 and Ra s al Jinz Also present in the tombs was diagnostic pottery of Jemdet Nasr period type 9 As for copper crucibles with metal traces small furnaces and about 300 copper tools were found at Ras al Jinz 10 Copper smelting began perhaps at al Batina 9 however such ores would leave little slag and the process did not require special conditions so there would be little to indicate its presence in the archaeological record Already at this time there is textual evidence from Sumer for international trade in copper and other commodities probably from Oman 11 nbsp Tomb at Shir of the Umm an Nar Period Bronze Age editThe Bronze Age typically ranges from 3300 to 1300 BCE encompassing part of the Hafit period 3100 2700 BCE and the Umm al Nar 2700 2000 BCE and Wadi Suq Periods 2000 1300 BCE 8 Early Bronze Age edit During this age metal production increased considerably in relation to that of the preceding Hafit Period with several plano convex copper ingots weighing 1 2 kg being found Tower or beehive tombs such as those at Shir can only be approximately dated and may date to the Hafit or Umm al Nar Periods 12 During the Umm al Nar Period large communal free standing tombs contain numerous interments and were more common Other tombs are smaller and may contain one or a few interments Similar tombs to those at Shir appear in the area of Shenah which is already slightly famous for its rock art sites A 2006 survey counted 325 beehive tombs dating from the late fourth to the early third millennium They either have single or double stacked walls of mostly limestone or sandstone with short rectangular entrances that face the East All of them built directly on top of the bedrock with no indication of any digging before building took place 13 The site known as Al Khashbah was the focus of a surveying project by the University of Tubingen in 2015 The various pedestrian surveys found slag and metal objects furnace fragments stone vessels jewelry stone tools and glass objects They located approximately 200 tombs and 10 monumental structures that could be dated to circa the 3rd millennium BCE with some more specifically dating to the earlier Hafit period and others dating to the later Umm al Nar period Some of these monumental structures were towers with some evidence for copper processing as some scholars have suggested that various stone tools not just classical anvils and pounding stones played important roles in the process of beneficiation of copper However some other buildings had indications of flint knapping 8 In 1982 a potsherd attributed to the Indus Valley Civilization was found at Ras al Jinz located at the easternmost point of the Arabian Peninsula It was considered landmark proof that at least coastal Oman was connected to India in the third millennium BCE 10 14 Also found there were pieces of bitumen impressed with what appeared to be ropes reed mats and wood planks with a few of the fragments still housing barnacles implying it was caulking for an early boat 10 In Dhofar weapons came to light in a confirmed grave context datable to the 3rd millennium BCE 15 Late Bronze Age edit The Late Bronze Age is mostly represented by grave goods and excavated settlements It includes the last 200 1500 to 1300 BCE years of the Wadi Suq period 16 17 Of the structures found Al Khashbah only six tombs all of them subterranean could be dated to the 2nd millennium and the Wadi Suq period 8 Iron Age edit nbsp Northern face of the Jebel Radhania or Ruwadhah on top of which the Early Iron Age Lizq fort L1 was built The Iron Age is divided into two different periods Iron Age A 1300 300 BCE and Iron Age B 325 BCE 650 CE 18 Early Iron Age edit Known from different cemetery and copper producing sites especially the fort on the Jebel Radhania Lizq and the fort at Salut the Early Iron Age is generally accepted as lasting from 1300 to 300 BCE This period is known from some 142 archaeological sites located in the eastern part of the U A E as well as the central and northern parts of the Sultanate of Oman One scholar in particular offered concrete argumentation for a gradual transition as a model from the Early to Late Iron Ages at certain sites in Central Oman 19 However graves goods show no similarities between the two periods Usually hand made and hard fired the pottery from the Lizq fort is most similar to that from the latest Early Iron Age sites at al Moyassar or al Maysar and Samad al Shan In terms of pottery chronology its beginnings there are obscure 20 The dead are interred in existing subterranean tombs or in new hut like free standing ones All of the tombs of given group may be oriented in one direction however different groups deviate from each other The inhabitants must have considered their society to be a safe one since they built such visible and vulnerable free standing tombs with poor chances of survival and as a ready source of building materials have rapidly disappeared since 1980 No intact tomb of this period has ever been excavated nbsp Orthographic view of an Early Iron Age hut tomb at Bilad al Maʿdin in eastern Oman The number of copper alloy artifacts reaches a peak at this time which will only be surpassed around the 9th century CE The reason is that the technology to roast the more abundant sulfidic copper ore was developed A hoard of over 500 copper alloy artifacts at ʿIbri Selme gives a fair idea of the production at this time In 2012 another copper and iron metal working workshop came to light first reported incorrectly as at al Saffah when in reality this site is known as ʿUqdat al Bakrah More than 400 metallic artifacts often found close shape correspondences with those from ʿIbri Selme 21 An important connection with the outside world comes to bear in a cuneiform inscription 640 BCE of the Neo Assyrian king Assurbanipal he mentions emissaries sent by a king by the name of Pade who resides in Izki in the land of Qade 22 It yielded to date nearly 700 metallic artifacts The introduction of the falaj for irrigation coincides with the rapid growth of date as a main crop The chronology for this age resembles but also differs from the better known one of the present day U A E During this Iron Age paradoxically in Oman iron artifacts are rather rare although in neighbouring Iran after 1200 BCE iron weapons are characteristic Pre Arabic place names such as Nizwa Izki Rustaq and ʿIbri probably represent the bare remnants of the language and speakers of this and the next age 23 In November 2019 45 well preserved tombs covering a 50 80 square metre area and a settlement dating back to beginning of the Iron Age were discovered in Al Mudhaibi by archaeologists from Oman and Heidelberg University Archaeologists believed that the site was inhabited by the miners of the nearby copper 24 Samad Late Iron Age edit At the end of the Early Iron Age after some 200 300 years without absolutely dated archaeological contexts weak evidence appears for the Samad Late Iron Age from lt 100 BCE to 300 CE as dated by thermoluminescence and a few outside artifact comparisons This assemblage is known from 13 possible and 74 more certainly attributed archaeological sites in 30 localities Evidence for a transition from the EIA Early Iron Age is rare in eastern Oman and the chronological situation is clearest at the multi period site complex at al Moyassar where falaj water sites from the EIA LIA Late Iron Age and medieval periods survive to this day Over the centuries and especially recently the water table dropped so that the falaj floor had to be lowered to the height of the water table 25 This period was witness to a drastic reduction in population for reasons unknown Evident during this period is also a loss of copper producing technology nbsp Eastern Oman Late Iron Age sites Samad LIA sites scatter over an estimated 17 000 km2 6 600 sq mi bordered to the west in Izki to the north in the capital area to the south Jaʿlan and to the east at the coast 26 An assemblage attributable to the Samad period is absent in the Baṭinah 27 and is limited basically to the Sharqiyah province Samad al Shan and smaller sites such as al Akhdhar al Amqat Bawshar 28 and al Bustan are type sites for this non writing population with mostly hand made pottery copper alloy and iron artefacts Reoccurring pottery wares and shapes small finds as well as a few grave structure types define the Samad Late Iron Age assemblage 29 30 Where the soil is deep enough individual stone built graves are sunk into the earth Such classical Samad graves have a low wall on the roof near the north western end perpendicular to the long axis They contain flexed skeletons with the men usually are placed on the right side and the women usually on the left their heads generally point toward the south east Few fragmentary settlements Mahaliya al Nejd Nejd Madirah Qaryat al Saiḥ in Wadi Maḥram Samad al Shan sites S1 S7 ʿUmq al Rabaḫ Ṭiwi site TW2 have been documented nbsp Imported Abiel tetradrachm found in the Late Iron Age settlement al Nejd in eastern Oman No coins were struck locally and to date only two examples have turned up in contexts together with Samad Late Iron Age pottery while the northern part of traditional Oman had at least partly a currency economy Central Oman did not In the LIA a few glazed pottery imports derive from the upper Gulf and southern Mesopotamia One class of pottery balsamaria are wheel turned and also are common in the late Pre Islamic Late Iron Age graves in both areas of Oman Approximately 3 4 of the find inventories in Central Oman finds are attributable to the Samad assemblage far fewer to the recent pre Islamic period and a few cannot be attributed to a definable assemblage Persian Achaemenid Parthian and Sasanian dominance of Oman is firmly entrenched in the secondary literature thus it is easy to criticize the integrity of the definition of the Samad assemblage Parthian and later Sasanian invaders from Iran temporarily dominated certain towns 31 politically and militarily but for logistical reasons it was only possible to occupy a few sites as occurred during later invasions 32 Persian presence is inferred by a few place names near or on the coast e g al Rustaq and personal names in Izki 33 It appears that at this time in Central Oman so called Modern South Arabian languages were spoken For the Early Iron Age this is far less certain From 500 BCE to 500 CE or later waves of migratory tribes from South and Central Arabia settle in south eastern Arabia and Iran as we know from oral historical sources If so then at least at first linguistically such populations were South Arabians and not Arabs The tribal grounds of the Azd tribes in south eastern Arabia of course are far larger and more diverse than the area of the Samad Late Iron Age sites To judge from the Samad stone graves and from evidence about their diet this was not Bedouin population but rather consisted of farmers These tribes brought the South Arabian later Arabic linguistic variety with them as far east as Khorasan in Iran However Omani Arabic has its own words and is not just an import from Central Arabia 34 It is assumed that Classical Arabic arrived with the Arab diaspora and Islam in the 7th and 8th centuries CE first to the metropolitan centres The occurrence in Arabia and the Red Sea littoral of ribbed amphorae manufactured in Aqaba Ayla evidently in order to transport wine shows the area just north of Aqaba to have been a fruitful agricultural area from 400 up to possibly 1000 On the other hand Dr Fleitmann has studied stalagmites from al Hutah Cave in central Oman and has gathered information for a series of megadroughts especially around 530 CE These may have afflicted the entire Peninsula 35 non Samad Late Iron Age edit nbsp A trilith at the site near al Jawabi in the Ṣur Wilayat Several Late Iron Age sites do not link in terms of form and details of manufacture of their artifacts with the Samad characteristic assemblage For example the weapons are differently fashioned as in one grave at Bawshar 36 Curiously some of the monuments previously described as megalithic 37 are now described as small stone monuments 38 The term megalith has been used and misused in a wide variety of meanings triliths found in Oman differ from ones in Europe in size and shape The most important example are triliths Arab ʿathfiya ʿathafy rowed groups of three stones perched together to form a steep pyramid A fourth stone may lie horizontally on top Triliths usually lie in wadis the main habitation area of nomads 39 Scholars have suggested a connection between the speakers of the Modern South Arabian Language Mahra and the triliths 40 41 42 43 To judge from Mehra place names and the triliths Mahri speakers lived further to the north until Bedouin tribes pushed them into the south 44 The triliths are the only find category that central and southern Oman hold in common A connection with Ṧḥahri Ǧibbali is also plausible since triliths lie in areas in which today this language group still is actively spoken 45 46 47 The Pre Islamic recent period 48 is known from different sites in the Sultanate for example probably ʿAmlaʾ Amlah al Fuwaydah Such sites are largely contemporary with Late Iron Age of Samad in Central Oman especially in the Sharqiyah In the U A E such show evidence of writing such as on coins Regarding the relative chronology of the two there is considerable consensus However a difficulty in order to build a chronology lies in the lack of clear artefactual parallels between the Samad assemblage and that of these sites At the partially excavated cemetery site of al Fuwaydah the artifacts especially pottery and metalwork are more similar to contemporary ones from the U A E than to those of Samad 49 Iron Age in Dhofar edit nbsp Sherd of medieval pottery from Khor Rori in southern OmanVarious survey and a few excavations have shed light on the archaeology of the South Province of the Sultanate 50 the largest and best known site is Khor Rori a trading fort established by the Hadhramite kingdom in the 3rd century BCE 51 While this site shows a mixture of artifacts many of which are of Old South Arabian type the surrounding countryside reveals a melange of different kinds of artifacts Khor Rori owes its existence to the trading of aromatics in particular frankincense 52 The type of sherd depicted was for many years considered to be Late Iron Age but recent research re dates it to the medieval period Islamic Age editVery little archaeological evidence from the early Islamic Age exists the earliest building structures which survive date to medieval times With the coming of Islam and the diaspora of Arabian tribes the Arabic language took hold in Oman Copper production reaches a record high to judge from the amount of slag which has survived from 150 known smelting sites 53 With 100 000 tons of slag Lasail or more properly al Azayl in Wadi Jizzi is the largest smelting site in Oman 54 55 The slag showed that the hill was mined away and processed in nearby furnaces with part of the work also being carried out underground Wooden supports found 40 meters underground marked evidence of the underground work with theories supposing that the tunnels caved in A similar site Semdah was undermined and over exploited thus a cave in occurred 56 Sources editMichel Mouton La peninsule d Oman de la fin de l age du fer au debut de la periode sasanide 250 av 350 ap JC 1992 BAR International Series 1776 printed 2008 Daniel T Potts The Persian Gulf in Antiquity 2 vols Oxford 1992 Paul Yule Cross roads Early and Late Iron Age South eastern Arabia Abhandlungen Deutsche Orient Gesellschaft vol 30 Wiesbaden 2014 ISBN 978 3 447 10127 1 E Book ISBN 978 3 447 19287 3 References edit Jeffrey I Rose amp Anthony E Marks Out of Arabia and the Middle Upper Palaeolithic transition in the southern Levant Quartar 61 2014 49 85 Rose Jeffrey I Usik Vitaly I Marks Anthony E Hilbert Yamandu H Galletti Christopher S Parton Ash Geiling Jean Marie Cerny Viktor Morley Mike W Roberts Richard G 2011 11 30 Petraglia Michael D ed The Nubian Complex of Dhofar Oman An African Middle Stone Age Industry in Southern Arabia PLOS ONE 6 11 e28239 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 628239R doi 10 1371 journal pone 0028239 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3227647 PMID 22140561 Bonilauri Stephanie Beuzen Waller Tara Giraud Jessica Lemee Marion Gernez Guillaume Fouache Eric 2015 Occupation during the Lower and Middle Late Paleolithic period in the Sufrat Valley Adam region Sultanate of Oman Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 45 Archaeopress 21 34 via JSTOR a b Biagi Paolo 2020 Shell Middens of the Arabian Sea Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology Cham Springer International Publishing pp 9663 9679 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 30018 0 3462 ISBN 978 3 030 30016 6 retrieved 2020 11 05 a b c Mery Sophie Charpentier Vincent 2013 04 18 Neolithic material cultures of Oman and the Gulf seashores from 5500 4500 BCE Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy 24 1 73 78 doi 10 1111 aae 12010 ISSN 0905 7196 Lemee Marion Gernez Guillaume Giraud Jessica Beuzen Waller Tara Fouache Eric 2013 Jabal al Aluya an inland Neolithic settlement of the late fifth millennium BC in the Adam area Sultanate of Oman Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 43 Papers from the forty sixth meeting of the Seminar for Arabian Studies held at the British Museum London Archaeopress 197 211 via JSTOR Crassard R Charpentier V McCorriston J Vosges J Bouzid S Petraglia MD 2020 ed Biehl P F Fluted point technology in Neolithic Arabia An independent invention far from the Americas PLoS ONE 15 8 e0236314 doi 10 1371 journal pone 0236314 a b c d Dopper Stephanie 2020 Ground stone tools from the copper production site Al Khashbah Sultanate of Oman Journal of Lithic Studies 7 3 School of History Classics and Archaeology University of Edinburgh 24 doi 10 2218 jls 3082 a b Yule Paul Weisgerber Gerd 1996 Die 14 Deutsche Archaologische Oman Expedition 1995 doi 10 11588 propylaeumdok 00000577 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b c Story of Ras Al Jinz Archived 2016 09 10 at the Wayback Machine Oman Information Weisgerber Gerd Kroll Stephan 1981 Mehr als Kupfer in Oman Ergebnisse der Expedition 1981 Vereinigung der Freunde von Kunst und Kultur im Bergbau pp 174 263 Yule Paul Weisgerber Gerd 1998 The Tower Tombs at Shir Eastern Hajar Sultanate of Oman Beitrage zur allgemeinen und vergleichenden Archaologie BAVA 18 pp 183 241 ISBN 3 8053 2518 5 Al Belushi Mohammed Ali ElMahi Ali Tigani 2009 Archaeological investigations in Shenah Sultanate of Oman Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies Papers from the forty second meeting of the Seminar for Arabian Studies held in London 39 Archaeopress 31 41 via JSTOR Tosi Maurizio 1987 Die Indus Zivilisation jenseits des indischen Subkontinents Vergessene Stadte am Indus Mainz am Rhein pp 132 133 ISBN 3805309570 Paul Yule A Prehistoric Grave Inventory from Aztaḥ Ẓafar in P Yule ed Studies in the Archaeology of the Sultanate of Oman Orient Archaologie vol 2 Rahden Westfalia 1999 91 6 ISBN 3 89646 632 1 Christian Velde Wadi Suq and Late Bronze Age in the Oman Peninsula in Proceedings of the First Archaeological Conference on the U A E London 102 13 Paul Yule amp Gerd Weisgerber Al Wasiṭ Tomb W1 and other Sites Materials for a Definition of the Second Half of the 2nd Millennium BCE Anschnitt 2015 9 108 Juris Zarins The Land of Incense Archaeological Work in the Governorate of Dhofar Sultanate of Oman 1990 1995 Muscat 2001 79 104 ISBN unspecified Jurgen Schreiber Transformationsprozesse in Oasensiedlungen Omans Die vorislamische Zeit am Beispiel von Izki Nizwa und dem Jebel Akhdar Dissertation Munich 1977 URL http edoc ub uni muenchen de 7548 1 Schreiber Juergen pdf Stephan Kroll The Early Iron Age Lizq Fort Sultanate of Oman translated and revised by P Yule Zeitschrift fur die Kultur aussereuropaischen Kulturen 5 2013 159 220 ISBN 978 3 89500 649 4 Paul Yule amp Gerd Weisgerber The Metal Hoard from ʿIbri Arabic عبري Selme Sultanate of Oman Prahistorische Bronzefunde xx7 Stuttgart 2001 ISBN 3 515 07153 9 R Borger Beitrage zum Inschriftenwrk Assurbanipals die Prismenklassen A B C K D E F G H J und T sowie andere Inschriften Wiesbaden 1996 28 294 Petersen Andrew 2009 Islamic urbanism in eastern Arabia the case of the al Ayn al Buryami oasis Papers from the Forty second Meeting of the Seminar for Arabian Studies Held in London 39 Papers from the forty second meeting of the Seminar for Arabian Studies held in London Archaeopress 307 320 via JSTOR Iron Age tombs discovered in Oman Archaeology World Retrieved 2020 09 17 Gerd Weisgerber The Impact of the Dynamics of Qanats and Aflaj on Oases in Oman Internationales Frontinus Symposium Wasserversorgung aus Qanaten Qanate als Vorbilder im Tunnelbau 2 5 Oktober 2003 Luxemburg Heft 26 2003 61 97 esp 74 7 fig 24 9 P Yule C Pariselle Silver phiale said to be from al Juba al Wusṭa Governorate an archaeological puzzle Arab Arch Epigraphy 27 2016 153 Ben Saunders Archaeological Rescue Excavations on Packages 3 and 4 of the Batinah Expressway Sultanate of Oman British Foundation for the Study of Arabia monograph 18 Oxford 2016 Naṣir ʾal Jahwari wa ʿAli ʾal Tijani ʾal Maḥi juġrafiyyat ʾal mawqiʿ wa ṯaqafat ʾal makan nataʾij ḥafriyyat mawqiʿ Bawsar Salṭanat ʿUman Adumatu 15 2007 7 32 Paul Yule Die Graberfelder in Samad al Shan Sultanat Oman Materialien zu einer Kulturgeschichte Orient Archaologie 4 Rahden 2001 ISBN 3 89646 634 8 Paul Yule Cross roads Early and Late Iron Age South eastern Arabia Abhandlungen Deutsche Orient Gesellschaft vol 30 Wiesbaden 2014 ISBN 978 3 447 10127 1 pages 62 66 Paul Yule Late Pre Islamic Oman The Inner Evidence The Outside View Hoffmann Ruf M al Salami A eds Studies on Ibadism and Oman Oman and Overseas vol 2 Hildesheim 2013 13 33 ISBN 978 3 487 14798 7 Heinz Halm Der vordere Orient um 1200 Tubinger Atlas Des Vorderen Orients sheet B VIII 1 Wiesbaden 1985 ISBN 978 3882267372 John Wilkinson The origins of the aflaj of Oman Jour Om Stud 6 1 1983 182 3 C Holes A participial infix in the eastern Arabian dialects an ancient pre conquest feature Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam 38 2011 77 Fleitmann D Mudelsee M Bradley R S Burns S J Cheng H Mangini A Edwards R Matter A 2010 Megadroughts at the Dawn of Islam Recorded in a Stalagmite from Oman Abstract PP51B 06 presented at 2010 Fall Meeting AGU San Francisco California 13 17 Dec P Yule G Costa C Philipps Grave IIb in Paul Yule ed Studies in the Archaeology of the Sultanate of Oman Rahden 1999 22 27 Fig 5 ISBN 3 89646 632 1 Walter Dostal Zur Megalithenfrage in Sudarabien in Festschrift Werner Caskel Brill Leiden 1968 53 61 Abdalaziz Ja afar bin Aqil amp Joy McCorriston Prehistoric small scale monument types in Hadramawt southern Arabia convergences in ethnography linguistics and archaeology Antiquity 83 2009 602 18 Cf Jorg Janzen Die Nomaden Dhofars Sultanat Oman traditional Lebensformen im Wandel Bamberg 1980 ISSN 0344 6557 Walter Dostal Die Beduinen in Sudarabien Eine ethnologische Studie zur Entwicklung der Kamelhirtenkultur in Arabien Vienna 1967 Paul Yule Late Pre Islamic Oman The Inner Evidence The Outside View in M Hoffmann Ruf A al Salami eds Studies on Ibadism and Oman Oman and Overseas vol 2 Hildesheim 2013 13 33 ISBN 978 3 487 14798 7 Michael J Harrower Matthew J Senn and Joy McCorriston Tombs triliths and oases spatial analysis of the Arabian human social dynamics AHSD project archaeological survey 2009 2010 Journal Oman Stud 18 2014 145 151 ISSN 0378 8180 Juris Zarins The Land of Incense Archaeological Work in the Governorate of Dhofar Sultanate of Oman 1990 1995 Sultan Qaboos University Publications Archaeology amp Cultural Heritage Series vol 1 Muscat 2001 134 5 fig 65 map Dostal 1967 184 8 W Muller Mahra Encyclopedia of Islam v 6 1991 82 Ali Aḥmad Maḥash al Shaḥri Grave types and triliths in Dhofar Arab Archaeol Epigraphy 2 1991 190 193 ISSN 0905 7196 Ali Ahmad Mahash al Shahri kayfa btadaynt wa kayfa rtaqayna bi l ḥaḍara l ʾinsaniyya min sibh al zazira l ʿarabiyya Ẓafar kitabatuha wa nuqusuha l qadima ʾaṭ ṭabʿula Dubai 1994 pages 273 4 figs 248 251 Ali Ahmad Mahash al Shahri The Language of Aad Dubai 2000 188 9 figs Michel Mouton La peninsule d Oman de la fin de l age du fer au debut de la periode sasanide 250 av 350 ap JC BAR International Series 1776 1992 printed 2008 ISBN 978 1 4073 0264 5 Paul Alan Yule ʿAmlah al Zahirah Sultanat Oman spateisenzeitliche Graberfelder 1997 in Paul Yule ed Studies in the archaeology of the Sultanate of Oman Orient Archaologie 2 Rahden 1999 119 186 ISBN 3 89646 632 1 Juris Zarins The Land of Incense Archaeological Work in the Governorate of Dhofar Sultanate of Oman 1990 1995 Muscat 2001 ISBN unspecified A Avanzini A Port in Arabia between Rome and the Indian Ocean 3rd century BC 5th century AD Rome 2008 ISBN 978 88 8265 469 6 W W Muller Weihrauch in Paulys Realencyclopadie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft vol 15 Munich 1978 699 777 Gerd Weisgerber Die Suche nach dem altsumerischen Kupferland Makan Das Altertum37 1991 76 90 G W Goettler N Firth C C Huston A preoiminary discussion of ancient min ing in the Sultanate of Oman Jour Oman Stud 2 1976 44 Gerd Weisgerber Mehr als Kupfer in Oman Der Anschnitt 5 6 1981 184 5 fig 7 Weisgerber Gerd 1980 PATTERNS OF EARLY ISAMIC METALLURGY IN OMAN Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Seminar 10 Proceedings of the Thirteenth SEMINAR FOR ARABIAN STUDIES held at the Middle East Centre Cambridge Archaeopress 115 126 via JSTOR External links editUniversity of Heidelberg heidICONSee also edit nbsp Oman portal List of archaeological sites by country al Akhdhar Amlah al Amqat al Bustan Mahri language al Moyassar al Nejd Sultanate of Oman Izki Lizq Pre Islamic recent period Qaryat al Saih Samad al Shan Tiwi Oman ʿUmq al Rabaḫ ʿUqdat al Bakrah Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Archaeology of Oman amp oldid 1190127091 Samad Late Iron Age, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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