An Egyptian-American archaeological mission involving Yale University has uncovered a flint quarrying area that has been dated to several archaeological periods at the Elkab site in Edfu, on the west bank of the Nile near Aswan. Written By/ Nevine El-Aref.
The
discovery was revealed during the Elkab Desert Archaeological Survey Project at
Bir Umm Tineidba, located at the juncture of Wadi Hilal Road. The mission
discovered a wealth of archaeological and epigraphic material, including
numerous concentrations of rock art, primarily of the Pre-Dynastic and
Proto-Dynastic periods; burial tumuli of the Proto-Dynastic period; and another
thus-far unrecorded Late Roman settlement.
John
Coleman Darnielen, head of the Yale University team, said that the mission
found three rock art sections revealing important scenes of the Naqada II and
Naqada III Dynasties (ca. 3500-3100 BCE), providing evidence for the continuity
and interaction of artistic styles of the Eastern Desert and Nile Valley.
“The
most impressive image may be dated to ca. 3300 BCE, depicting animals,
including a bull, a giraffe, an addax, a barbary sheep and donkeys,” Darnielen
said. The image provides important clues to the religion and symbolic
communication of Pre-Dynastic Egyptians before the invention of the
hieroglyphic script, he said.
Wadi
of Umm Tineidba is also the location of several burial tumuli that appear to
belong to desert dwellers with physical ties to both the Nile Valley and the
Red Sea. One of the tumuli, he said, was the burial place of a woman of age
ranging between 25-35 years old at the time of her death.
She
was probably one of the local desert elite and was buried with at least one
vessel in the standard Nilotic style, as well as with a strand of Red Sea
shells and carnelian beads, alluding to her desert and Red Sea associations. Additional
tumuli at the site may reveal further evidence concerning these desert people.
To
the south of the rock inscription and tumuli sites lies a Late Roman-era
settlement with dozens of stone structures. The ceramic evidence, as well as
comparative material, indicates that the site dates to between 400 and 600 CE.
This
Late Roman site complements the evidence for similar archaeological sites in
the Eastern Desert, and once again fills a gap in an area once blank on the
archaeological map of the area. “The newly discovered rock art at Bir Umm
Tineidba reveal a desert population coming under increasing influence from the
Nile Valley during the time of Dynasty 0,” Darnielen asserted.
It also shows the adoption of Nile Valley
imagery and its proper understanding by a group whose earlier art has more in
common with that of other Eastern Desert sites. The rock art and burial tumuli
discovery shed more light on the understanding of the integration of “marginal”
groups into the early pharaonic culture and state.
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