8000 years-old Workshop Discovered in Shahrud, Iran
Feb 10, 2005, 11:41
Iranian archaeologists discovered an 8000-year-old stone tool workshop during the first archaeological study at an ancient site south of Shahrud, in the northeastern province of Semnan, team member Korush Rustaie announced on Tuesday.
The excavations carried out over the past few years by Iranian and Japanese experts in Dehkheyr and Chakhmagh Tepe, south of Shahrud, resulted in the discovery of traces from the Neolithic era (9000–8000 B.C.), putting the region on the archaeological map.
Shahrud is located 398 kilometers east of Tehran.
"We made new discoveries in the region near the Siarigi Tepe, which dates back to 6000 B.C., finding a site with stones of opal, chert, and flint, which led the team toward an ancient workshop where stone tools were made," Rustaie told CHN.
The remains of broken stones indicate that a great variety of stone tools, like sickles, arrowheads, and blades, were being mass produced in the workshop, which covers an area of 2000 square meters, he added....>>
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