Abstract
This study uses quartz-based optically stimulated luminescence dating to determine when a massive fortification wall (W11186) was constructed in the archaeological site of Tall Zarʿa in the Jordan Valley. A total of 11 samples of sediments were taken from a trench on the north side of the wall (extramuros). The extracted quartz grains had good luminescence characteristics and were identified as well bleached by comparison with feldspar infrared-stimulated luminescence (IRSL) ages. The optical ages showed that the deposition against the wall occurred in two different periods. The first was around 3.20 ± 0.07 ka ago (Iron Age), and the second was around 2.28 ± 0.08 ka (Hellenistic period). Human activity was evident because of the intermixing of cultural material with the presumed naturally deposited units.
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al Khasawneh, S., Schmidt, K., Murray, A., & Thompson, W. (2023). Luminescence dating of anthropogenic deposits from Tall Zarʿa in the Jordan Valley. Archaeometry, 65(5), 972–986. https://doi.org/10.1111/arcm.12871
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