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Tell (archaeology)

In archaeology, a tell or tel (borrowed into English from Arabic: تَلّ, tall, 'mound' or 'small hill'),[1] is an artificial topographical feature, a species of mound[a] consisting of the accumulated and stratified debris of a succession of consecutive settlements at the same site, the refuse of generations of people who built and inhabited them, and of natural sediment.[3][b][5][6]

Tell Barri, northeastern Syria, from the west; this is 32 meters (105 feet) high, and its base covers 37 hectares (90 acres)

Tells are most commonly associated with the ancient Near East, but they are also found elsewhere, such as Southern and parts of Central Europe, from Greece and Bulgaria to Hungary and Spain[7][8] and in North Africa.[3][9][10][11] Within the Near East, they are concentrated in less arid regions, including Upper Mesopotamia, the Southern Levant, Anatolia and Iran, which had more continuous settlement.[12] Eurasian tells date to the Neolithic,[13][dubious ] the Neolithic/Chalcolithic, and the Bronze Age/Iron Age era.[14] In the Southern Levant the time of the tells ended with the conquest by Alexander the Great, which ushered in the Hellenistic period with its own, different settlement-building patterns.[citation needed] Many tells across the Near East continue to be occupied and used today.[15]

Etymology

The word tell is first attested in English in an 1840 report in the Journal of the Royal Geographical Society.[16] It is derived from the Arabic تَلّ (tall) meaning 'mound' or 'hillock'.[1][16] Variant spellings include tall, tel, til, and tal.[17]

The Arabic word has many cognates in other Semitic languages, such as Akkadian tīlu(m), Ugaritic tl,[18] and Hebrew tel (תל).[19] The Akkadian form is similar to Sumerian DUL, which can also refer to a 'pile' of any material, like grain, but it is not known whether the similarity reflects a borrowing from that language, or if the Sumerian term itself was a loanword from an earlier Semitic substrate language.[20] If Akkadian tīlu is related to another word in that language, til'u, meaning 'woman's breast', there exists a similar term in the South Semitic classical Ethiopian language of Geʽez, namely təla, 'breast'.[18] Hebrew tel first appears in the biblical book of Deuteronomy 13:16 (ca. 500–700 BCE),[21] describing a heap or small mound, and appearing in the books of Joshua and Ezekiel with the same meaning.[citation needed]

 
The Citadel of Aleppo, northern Syria, on top of a tell occupied since at least the third millennium BC
 

There are lexically unrelated equivalents for this geophysical concept of a town-mound in other Southwest Asian languages, including kom in Egyptian Arabic,[22] tepe or tappeh (Turkish/Persian: تپه), hüyük or höyük (Turkish), and chogha (Persian: چغا, from Turkish çokmak and derivatives çoka etc.).[23] These often appear in place names,[17] and the word itself is one of the most common prefixes for Palestinian toponyms.[24] The Arabic word khirbet, also spelled khirbat (خربة), meaning 'ruin', also occurs in the names of many archaeological tells, such as Khirbet et-Tell (roughly meaning 'heap of ruins').[25]

Formation

A tell can only be formed if natural and man-produced material accumulates faster than it is removed by erosion and human-caused truncation,[6] which explains the limited geographical area they occur in.[original research?]

Tells are formed from a variety of remains, including organic and cultural refuse, collapsed mudbricks and other building materials, water-laid sediments, residues of biogenic and geochemical processes, and aeolian sediment.[26] A classic tell looks like a low, truncated cone with sloping sides[27] and a flat, mesa-like top.[28] They can be more than 43 m (141 ft) high.[23]

Occurrence

Southwest Asia

 
Tell Barri, northeastern Syria. Note the person standing in the middle for scale

It is thought that the earliest examples of tells are to be found in the Jordan Valley, such as at the 10 meter-high mound, dating back to the proto-Neolithic period, at Jericho in the West Bank.[3] Upwards of 5,000 tells have been detected in the area of ancient Israel and Jordan.[29] Of these Paul Lapp calculated in the 1960s that 98% had yet to be touched by archaeologists.[29]

In Syria, tells are abundant in the Upper Mesopotamia region, in which they scatter along the Euphrates, including Tell al-'Abr, Tell Bazi, Tell Kabir, Tell Mresh, Tell Saghir and Tell Banat.[30] The latter is thought to be the site of the oldest war memorial (known as the White Monument), dated back to the 3rd millennium BC.[31]

Europe

Tells can be found in Europe in countries like Spain, Hungary, Romania,[8] Bulgaria,[32] North Macedonia, and Greece.[8]

Northeastern Bulgaria has a rich archaeological heritage of eneolithic[c] tells from the 5th millennium BCE.[32]

In Neolithic Greece, there is a contrast between the northern Thessalian plain where rainfall was sufficient to permit densely populated settlements based on dry-farming and the more dispersed sites in southern Greece, such as the Peloponesus, where early villages sprang up around the smaller arable tracts close to springs, lakes and marshes.[34] There are two models to account for the tell structures of this part of southern Europe, one developed by Paul Halstead and the other by John Chapman. Chapman envisaged the tell as witness to a nucleated communal society, whereas Halstead emphasized the idea that they arose as individual household structures.[35] Thessalian tells often reflect small hamlets with a small population of around 40–80.[36]

The Toumbas of Macedonia and the Magoulas of Thessaly are the local names for tell sites in these regions of Greece.

See also

Notes and references

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ 'Artificial mounds are a characteristic feature of permanent and semipermanent settlement locations in past cultural landscapes, particularly on sedimentary plains, but also in arid and semiarid regions.'[2]
  2. ^ 'It is a paradox that a tell cannot by definition begin life as a tell – its earliest incarnation is as a flat site, like other flat sites in its vicinity. Such places did not take on the visual characteristics of tells for some generations but remained in statu nascendi. There is a critical time between the first reoccupation of a placed and the physical manifestation of a mound-a period of generations, if not centuries… The physical transformation of a tell-to-be into a tell depends upon two long-term physical concentrations – of people and house daub.. The nucleation of people in households living close to one another is the first prerequisite of tell-becoming.'[4]
  3. ^ 4900–3800 B.C.E.[33]

References

  1. ^ a b Kirkpatrick, E. M., ed. (1983). Chambers 20th Century Dictionary (New ed.). Edinburgh: W & R Chambers Ltd. p. 1330. ISBN 0550102345.
  2. ^ Orengo&al 2020, p. 18240.
  3. ^ a b c Shaw 2002, p. 566.
  4. ^ Chapman 2000, p. 207.
  5. ^ Negev, Avraham; Gibson, Shimon, eds. (2001). Tell. Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land. New York and London: Continuum. p. 497. ISBN 0-8264-1316-1. Retrieved 9 October 2021. (Very limited snippet view).
  6. ^ a b Matthews (2020), Introduction and Definition
  7. ^ Bailey&al 1998, p. 373-396.
  8. ^ a b c Blanco-González & Kienlin, eds (2020), 6th page of chapter 1, see map.
  9. ^ MacDonald 1997, pp. 40–42.
  10. ^ Davidson&al 2010, pp. 1564–1571.
  11. ^ Kotsakis 1999, p. 66.
  12. ^ Wilkinson 2003, pp. 100–127.
  13. ^ Blanco-González & Kienlin, eds (2020), 2nd page of chapter 1, "Introduction: Learning from Prehistoric Tells", by the editors,
  14. ^ Chapman, John. In Blanco-González & Kienlin (2020), chapter 14, "Then, Now, to Come - A Commentary", 4th page.
  15. ^ "TerraWatchers, UCSD, and ASOR CHI Partner to Monitor Archaeological Sites". American Society of Overseas Research (ASOR). Retrieved 2021-10-13.
  16. ^ a b "tell". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  17. ^ a b Hirst 2019.
  18. ^ a b Leslau 1958, p. 55.
  19. ^ tel in Strong's Concordance via biblehub.com
  20. ^ Suriano 2012, p. 214, notes 17-19.
  21. ^ Bos, James M. (2013). Reconsidering the Date and Provenance of the Book of Hosea. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0-567-06889-7.
  22. ^ Shaw 2002, p. 567.
  23. ^ a b Matthews 2020, p. 7260.
  24. ^ Warfield 1885, p. 274.
  25. ^ Wagemakers 2014, p. 40.
  26. ^ Wilkinson 2003, p. 108.
  27. ^ Albright 1949, p. 16.
  28. ^ Suriano 2012, p. 213.
  29. ^ a b Lapp 1975, p. 1.
  30. ^ Anne Porter (2018). "The Tell Banat Settlement Complex during the Third and Second Millennia BCE" (PDF). Vorderasiatische Archäologie.
  31. ^ Anne Porter; et al. (2021). ""Their corpses will reach the base of heaven": a third-millennium BC war memorial in northern Mesopotamia?". Cambridge University Press. pp. 1–19. doi:10.15184/aqy.2021.58.
  32. ^ a b Bailey&al 1998, p. 378.
  33. ^ Bailey&al 1998, p. 375).
  34. ^ Bintliff 2012, p. 53.
  35. ^ Bintliff 2012, pp. 53–54.
  36. ^ Bintliff 2012, p. 55.

Bibliography

  • Albright, William Foxwell (1949). The Archaeology of Palestine. Penguin Books. pp. 7–22.
  • Bailey, Douglass; Tringham, Ruth; Bass, Jason; Stevanović, Mirjana; Hamilton, Mike; Neumann, Heike; Angelova, Ilke; Raduncheva, Ana (Winter 1998). "Expanding the Dimensions of Early Agricultural Tells: The Podgoritsa Archaeological Project, Bulgaria". Journal of Field Archaeology. 25 (4): 373–396. JSTOR 530635.
  • Bintliff, John (2012). The Complete Archaeology of Greece: From Hunter-Gatherers to the 20th Century A.D. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-118-25520-9.
  • Blanco-González, Antonio; Kienlin, Tobias L., eds. (2020). Current Approaches to Tells in the Prehistoric Old World: A cross-cultural comparison from Early Neolithic to the Iron Age. Oxbow Books. ISBN 9781789254877. Retrieved 9 October 2021.
  • Chapman, John (2000). Fragmentation in Archaeology: People, Places, and Broken Objects in the Prehistory of South-eastern Europe. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-15803-9.
  • Davidson, Donald A.; Wilson, Clare A.; Lemos, Irene S.; Theocharopoulos, S. P. (2010-07-01). "Tell formation processes as indicated from geoarchaeological and geochemical investigations at Xeropolis, Euboea, Greece". Journal of Archaeological Science. 37 (7): 1564–1571. doi:10.1016/j.jas.2010.01.017. hdl:1893/16434.
  • Hirst, K. Kris (22 March 2019). "What Is a Tell? The Remnants of Ancient Mesopotamian Cities". ThoughtCo.
  • Kotsakis, Kostas (1999). "What Tells can Tell: Social Space and Settlement in the Greek Neolithic". In Halstead, Paul (ed.). Neolithic Society in Greece. Sheffield Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-850-75824-2.
  • Lapp, Paul W. (1975). Lapp, Nancy L.; Hadidian, Fikran (eds.). The Tale of the Tell: Archaeological Studies by Paul W. Lapp. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-725-24234-0.
  • Leslau, Wolf (1958). Ethiopic and South Arabic Contributions to the Hebrew Lexicon. Vol. XX. University of California Publicans in Semitic Philology.
  • Lloyd, Seton (1963). Mounds of the Near East. Edinburgh University Press.
  • MacDonald, Kevin C. (23 November 1997). "More forgotten tells of Mali: an archaeologist's journey from here to Timbuktu" (PDF). Archaeology International. 1 (1): 40–42. doi:10.5334/ai.v1i0.216.
  • Matthews, Wendy (2020). "Tells in Archaeology". In Smith, Claire (ed.). Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology. Springer. pp. 7259–7262. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-30018-0_1512. ISBN 978-3-030-30016-6. S2CID 241215415.
  • Orengo, Hector A.; Conesa, Francesc C.; Garcia-Molsosa, Arnau; Lobo, Agustín; Green, Adam S.; Madella, Marco; Petrie, Cameron A. (4 August 2020). "Automated detection of archaeological mounds using machine-learning classification of multisensor and multitemporal satellite data" (PDF). PNAS. 117 (31): 18240–18250. doi:10.1073/pnas.2005583117. PMC 7414161. PMID 32690717.
  • Shaw, Ian (2002). "Tell". In Shaw, Ian; Jameson, Robert (eds.). A Dictionary of Archaeology. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 566–567. ISBN 978-0-631-23583-5.
  • Small, David B. (2019). The Ancient Greeks: Social Structure and Evolution. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-89505-7.
  • Suriano, Matthew J. (2012). "Ruin Hills at the Threshold of the Netherworld: The Tell in the Conceptual Landscape of the Ba'al Cycle and Ancient Near Eastern Mythology". Die Welt des Orients. 42 (2): 210–230. doi:10.13109/wdor.2012.42.2.210. JSTOR 23342127.
  • Wagemakers, Bart (2014). "Khirbet Et-Tell (Ai?)". Archaeology in the 'Land of Tells and Ruins': A History of Excavations in the Holy Land Inspired by the Photographs and Accounts of Leo Boer. Oxbow Books. ISBN 978-1-782-97245-7.
  • Warfield, Benjamin (1885). "The Scenes of the Baptist's Work". In Nicoll, W. Robertson (ed.). The Expositor. Hodder and Stoughton. pp. 267–282.
  • Wilkinson, Toby J. (2003). Archaeological Landscapes of the Near East. University of Arizona Press. pp. 100–127. ISBN 978-0-816-52173-9.

External links

  •   Media related to Tell (archaeology) at Wikimedia Commons

tell, archaeology, archaeology, tell, borrowed, into, english, from, arabic, tall, mound, small, hill, artificial, topographical, feature, species, mound, consisting, accumulated, stratified, debris, succession, consecutive, settlements, same, site, refuse, ge. In archaeology a tell or tel borrowed into English from Arabic ت ل tall mound or small hill 1 is an artificial topographical feature a species of mound a consisting of the accumulated and stratified debris of a succession of consecutive settlements at the same site the refuse of generations of people who built and inhabited them and of natural sediment 3 b 5 6 Tell Barri northeastern Syria from the west this is 32 meters 105 feet high and its base covers 37 hectares 90 acres Tel Be er Sheva Beersheva Israel Tells are most commonly associated with the ancient Near East but they are also found elsewhere such as Southern and parts of Central Europe from Greece and Bulgaria to Hungary and Spain 7 8 and in North Africa 3 9 10 11 Within the Near East they are concentrated in less arid regions including Upper Mesopotamia the Southern Levant Anatolia and Iran which had more continuous settlement 12 Eurasian tells date to the Neolithic 13 dubious discuss the Neolithic Chalcolithic and the Bronze Age Iron Age era 14 In the Southern Levant the time of the tells ended with the conquest by Alexander the Great which ushered in the Hellenistic period with its own different settlement building patterns citation needed Many tells across the Near East continue to be occupied and used today 15 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Formation 3 Occurrence 3 1 Southwest Asia 3 2 Europe 4 See also 5 Notes and references 5 1 Explanatory notes 5 2 References 5 3 Bibliography 6 External linksEtymology EditThe word tell is first attested in English in an 1840 report in the Journal of the Royal Geographical Society 16 It is derived from the Arabic ت ل tall meaning mound or hillock 1 16 Variant spellings include tall tel til and tal 17 The Arabic word has many cognates in other Semitic languages such as Akkadian tilu m Ugaritic tl 18 and Hebrew tel תל 19 The Akkadian form is similar to Sumerian DUL which can also refer to a pile of any material like grain but it is not known whether the similarity reflects a borrowing from that language or if the Sumerian term itself was a loanword from an earlier Semitic substrate language 20 If Akkadian tilu is related to another word in that language til u meaning woman s breast there exists a similar term in the South Semitic classical Ethiopian language of Geʽez namely tela breast 18 Hebrew tel first appears in the biblical book of Deuteronomy 13 16 ca 500 700 BCE 21 describing a heap or small mound and appearing in the books of Joshua and Ezekiel with the same meaning citation needed The Citadel of Aleppo northern Syria on top of a tell occupied since at least the third millennium BC Tel Megiddo northern Israel There are lexically unrelated equivalents for this geophysical concept of a town mound in other Southwest Asian languages including kom in Egyptian Arabic 22 tepe or tappeh Turkish Persian تپه huyuk or hoyuk Turkish and chogha Persian چغا from Turkish cokmak and derivatives coka etc 23 These often appear in place names 17 and the word itself is one of the most common prefixes for Palestinian toponyms 24 The Arabic word khirbet also spelled khirbat خربة meaning ruin also occurs in the names of many archaeological tells such as Khirbet et Tell roughly meaning heap of ruins 25 Formation EditA tell can only be formed if natural and man produced material accumulates faster than it is removed by erosion and human caused truncation 6 which explains the limited geographical area they occur in original research Tells are formed from a variety of remains including organic and cultural refuse collapsed mudbricks and other building materials water laid sediments residues of biogenic and geochemical processes and aeolian sediment 26 A classic tell looks like a low truncated cone with sloping sides 27 and a flat mesa like top 28 They can be more than 43 m 141 ft high 23 Occurrence EditSouthwest Asia Edit Tell Barri northeastern Syria Note the person standing in the middle for scale It is thought that the earliest examples of tells are to be found in the Jordan Valley such as at the 10 meter high mound dating back to the proto Neolithic period at Jericho in the West Bank 3 Upwards of 5 000 tells have been detected in the area of ancient Israel and Jordan 29 Of these Paul Lapp calculated in the 1960s that 98 had yet to be touched by archaeologists 29 In Syria tells are abundant in the Upper Mesopotamia region in which they scatter along the Euphrates including Tell al Abr Tell Bazi Tell Kabir Tell Mresh Tell Saghir and Tell Banat 30 The latter is thought to be the site of the oldest war memorial known as the White Monument dated back to the 3rd millennium BC 31 Europe Edit Tells can be found in Europe in countries like Spain Hungary Romania 8 Bulgaria 32 North Macedonia and Greece 8 Northeastern Bulgaria has a rich archaeological heritage of eneolithic c tells from the 5th millennium BCE 32 In Neolithic Greece there is a contrast between the northern Thessalian plain where rainfall was sufficient to permit densely populated settlements based on dry farming and the more dispersed sites in southern Greece such as the Peloponesus where early villages sprang up around the smaller arable tracts close to springs lakes and marshes 34 There are two models to account for the tell structures of this part of southern Europe one developed by Paul Halstead and the other by John Chapman Chapman envisaged the tell as witness to a nucleated communal society whereas Halstead emphasized the idea that they arose as individual household structures 35 Thessalian tells often reflect small hamlets with a small population of around 40 80 36 The Toumbas of Macedonia and the Magoulas of Thessaly are the local names for tell sites in these regions of Greece See also EditList of tells Acropolis Archaeological site MiddenNotes and references EditExplanatory notes Edit Artificial mounds are a characteristic feature of permanent and semipermanent settlement locations in past cultural landscapes particularly on sedimentary plains but also in arid and semiarid regions 2 It is a paradox that a tell cannot by definition begin life as a tell its earliest incarnation is as a flat site like other flat sites in its vicinity Such places did not take on the visual characteristics of tells for some generations but remained in statu nascendi There is a critical time between the first reoccupation of a placed and the physical manifestation of a mound a period of generations if not centuries The physical transformation of a tell to be into a tell depends upon two long term physical concentrations of people and house daub The nucleation of people in households living close to one another is the first prerequisite of tell becoming 4 4900 3800 B C E 33 References Edit a b Kirkpatrick E M ed 1983 Chambers 20th Century Dictionary New ed Edinburgh W amp R Chambers Ltd p 1330 ISBN 0550102345 Orengo amp al 2020 p 18240 a b c Shaw 2002 p 566 Chapman 2000 p 207 Negev Avraham Gibson Shimon eds 2001 Tell Archaeological Encyclopedia of the Holy Land New York and London Continuum p 497 ISBN 0 8264 1316 1 Retrieved 9 October 2021 Very limited snippet view a b Matthews 2020 Introduction and Definition Bailey amp al 1998 p 373 396 a b c Blanco Gonzalez amp Kienlin eds 2020 6th page of chapter 1 see map MacDonald 1997 pp 40 42 Davidson amp al 2010 pp 1564 1571 Kotsakis 1999 p 66 Wilkinson 2003 pp 100 127 Blanco Gonzalez amp Kienlin eds 2020 2nd page of chapter 1 Introduction Learning from Prehistoric Tells by the editors Chapman John In Blanco Gonzalez amp Kienlin 2020 chapter 14 Then Now to Come A Commentary 4th page TerraWatchers UCSD and ASOR CHI Partner to Monitor Archaeological Sites American Society of Overseas Research ASOR Retrieved 2021 10 13 a b tell Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b Hirst 2019 a b Leslau 1958 p 55 tel in Strong s Concordance via biblehub com Suriano 2012 p 214 notes 17 19 Bos James M 2013 Reconsidering the Date and Provenance of the Book of Hosea Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 567 06889 7 Shaw 2002 p 567 a b Matthews 2020 p 7260 Warfield 1885 p 274 Wagemakers 2014 p 40 Wilkinson 2003 p 108 Albright 1949 p 16 Suriano 2012 p 213 a b Lapp 1975 p 1 Anne Porter 2018 The Tell Banat Settlement Complex during the Third and Second Millennia BCE PDF Vorderasiatische Archaologie Anne Porter et al 2021 Their corpses will reach the base of heaven a third millennium BC war memorial in northern Mesopotamia Cambridge University Press pp 1 19 doi 10 15184 aqy 2021 58 a b Bailey amp al 1998 p 378 Bailey amp al 1998 p 375 Bintliff 2012 p 53 Bintliff 2012 pp 53 54 Bintliff 2012 p 55 Bibliography Edit Albright William Foxwell 1949 The Archaeology of Palestine Penguin Books pp 7 22 Bailey Douglass Tringham Ruth Bass Jason Stevanovic Mirjana Hamilton Mike Neumann Heike Angelova Ilke Raduncheva Ana Winter 1998 Expanding the Dimensions of Early Agricultural Tells The Podgoritsa Archaeological Project Bulgaria Journal of Field Archaeology 25 4 373 396 JSTOR 530635 Bintliff John 2012 The Complete Archaeology of Greece From Hunter Gatherers to the 20th Century A D John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 118 25520 9 Blanco Gonzalez Antonio Kienlin Tobias L eds 2020 Current Approaches to Tells in the Prehistoric Old World A cross cultural comparison from Early Neolithic to the Iron Age Oxbow Books ISBN 9781789254877 Retrieved 9 October 2021 Chapman John 2000 Fragmentation in Archaeology People Places and Broken Objects in the Prehistory of South eastern Europe Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 15803 9 Davidson Donald A Wilson Clare A Lemos Irene S Theocharopoulos S P 2010 07 01 Tell formation processes as indicated from geoarchaeological and geochemical investigations at Xeropolis Euboea Greece Journal of Archaeological Science 37 7 1564 1571 doi 10 1016 j jas 2010 01 017 hdl 1893 16434 Hirst K Kris 22 March 2019 What Is a Tell The Remnants of Ancient Mesopotamian Cities ThoughtCo Kotsakis Kostas 1999 What Tells can Tell Social Space and Settlement in the Greek Neolithic In Halstead Paul ed Neolithic Society in Greece Sheffield Academic Press ISBN 978 1 850 75824 2 Lapp Paul W 1975 Lapp Nancy L Hadidian Fikran eds The Tale of the Tell Archaeological Studies by Paul W Lapp Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 725 24234 0 Leslau Wolf 1958 Ethiopic and South Arabic Contributions to the Hebrew Lexicon Vol XX University of California Publicans in Semitic Philology Lloyd Seton 1963 Mounds of the Near East Edinburgh University Press MacDonald Kevin C 23 November 1997 More forgotten tells of Mali an archaeologist s journey from here to Timbuktu PDF Archaeology International 1 1 40 42 doi 10 5334 ai v1i0 216 Matthews Wendy 2020 Tells in Archaeology In Smith Claire ed Encyclopedia of Global Archaeology Springer pp 7259 7262 doi 10 1007 978 3 030 30018 0 1512 ISBN 978 3 030 30016 6 S2CID 241215415 Orengo Hector A Conesa Francesc C Garcia Molsosa Arnau Lobo Agustin Green Adam S Madella Marco Petrie Cameron A 4 August 2020 Automated detection of archaeological mounds using machine learning classification of multisensor and multitemporal satellite data PDF PNAS 117 31 18240 18250 doi 10 1073 pnas 2005583117 PMC 7414161 PMID 32690717 Shaw Ian 2002 Tell In Shaw Ian Jameson Robert eds A Dictionary of Archaeology John Wiley amp Sons pp 566 567 ISBN 978 0 631 23583 5 Small David B 2019 The Ancient Greeks Social Structure and Evolution Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 89505 7 Suriano Matthew J 2012 Ruin Hills at the Threshold of the Netherworld The Tell in the Conceptual Landscape of the Ba al Cycle and Ancient Near Eastern Mythology Die Welt des Orients 42 2 210 230 doi 10 13109 wdor 2012 42 2 210 JSTOR 23342127 Wagemakers Bart 2014 Khirbet Et Tell Ai Archaeology in the Land of Tells and Ruins A History of Excavations in the Holy Land Inspired by the Photographs and Accounts of Leo Boer Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 782 97245 7 Warfield Benjamin 1885 The Scenes of the Baptist s Work In Nicoll W Robertson ed The Expositor Hodder and Stoughton pp 267 282 Wilkinson Toby J 2003 Archaeological Landscapes of the Near East University of Arizona Press pp 100 127 ISBN 978 0 816 52173 9 External links Edit Media related to Tell archaeology at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tell archaeology amp oldid 1130233062, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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