9,000-year-old charms found in Israel

Yael Yolovitch / IAA / AP

Archaeologists say this limestone figurine of a ram, discovered at a highway construction site between Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, dates back 9,000 to 9,500 years.


Israeli archaeologists say two animal-shaped figurines discovered at the site of an Israeli highway construction project go back more than 9,000 years, and reflect the religious practices that were common in the region several millennia before Moses.

"It is known that hunting was the major activity in this period," Hamoud Khalaily, one of the directors of the Tel Mosa dig, said in a statement issued Wednesday by the Israeli Antiquities Authority. "Presumably, the figurines served as good-luck statues for ensuring the success of the hunt and might have been the focus of a traditional ceremony the hunters performed before going out into the field to pursue their prey."


One of the figurines, sculpted from limestone and measuring about 6 inches (15 centimeters) in length, looks like a horned ram. The other, smoothed and shaped from dolomite, seems to depict a buffalo, ox or other type of bovine animal, archaeologists said.

The Stone Age figurines turned up during an excavation that's being conducted a few miles north of Jerusalem to clear the way for widening Highway 1 to Tel Aviv. The project's directors said they were found last week, near a large round building that had a foundation built from fieldstones, and an upper wall section apparently made of mud brick.

Khalaily and excavation co-director Anna Eirikh said the finds date back 9,000 to 9,500 years. That's thousands of years before the time of Moses, who was thought to have lived in the time frame of 1400 to 1500 B.C. But the period when the figurines were created, known as the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B, may have been as much of a turning point for the region's social and religious practices as Moses' time was.

Yael Yolovitch / IAA via AP

This 9,000-year-old figurine was sculpted from dolomite, excavation directors Anna Eirikh and Hamoudi Khalaily said in a statement from the Israel Antiquities Authority. They said it "seems to depict a large animal with prominent horns that separate the elongated body from the head. The horns emerge from the middle of the head sideward and resemble those of a wild bovine or buffalo."

"The Pre-Pottery Neolithic B period ... is considered one of the most fascinating chapters in the history of mankind; many changes took place in it that shaped human society for thousands of years to come," Khalaily said. "During this period, the transition began from nomadism, based on hunting and gathering, to sedentary life, based on farming and grazing."

This was the age when animals were being domesticated, agriculture was on the rise, and urban settlements (including one of the earlier incarnations of the biblical city of Jericho) were being built up. Religion, too, was being codified. At Turkey's Göbekli Tepe archaeological site, for example, researchers have found the world's oldest-known temple, a place of worship that was first built up as far back as 12,000 years ago and was still apparently in use when the Tel Mosa figurines were sculpted hundreds of miles away.

Khalaily suspects that the figurines were used as good-luck charms for hunting, but Eirikh has an alternate theory: Perhaps the figurines were associated with efforts to domesticate wild oxen or goats. Either way, these statuettes served as stand-ins for the creatures that Stone Age societies were beginning to bring under their control.

More about ancient art:


Alan Boyle is NBCNews.com's science editor. Connect with the Cosmic Log community by "liking" the log's Facebook page, following @b0yle on Twitter and adding the Cosmic Log page to your Google+ presence. To keep up with Cosmic Log as well as NBCNews.com's other stories about science and space, sign up for the Tech & Science newsletter, delivered to your email in-box every weekday. You can also check out "The Case for Pluto," my book about the controversial dwarf planet and the search for new worlds.

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Man, what confusion. Church after church says the universe was created in the year 4004 BC, complete with people, dinosaurs, and amoebas. Now they say these artifacts are 9,000 years old? What about the galaxies that are so far away it has taken 13.7 billion years for their light to reach us? How can I ever go to "Heaven" if the clergy that is responsible for teaching me the "truth" can't even make sense?

    Reply#54 - Mon Sep 3, 2012 12:52 PM EDT

    Just remember jerry.. it's not a lie if you believe it

      #54.1 - Mon Sep 3, 2012 1:19 PM EDT

      Also consider that the Bible, in its various forms, suggest that we all came from the same gene pool ~ and don't get me started on Genesis chapter 6 ~

        #54.2 - Mon Sep 3, 2012 9:00 PM EDT
        Reply

        The "bovine" artifact looks more like a dildo than any bovine.

          Reply#55 - Mon Sep 3, 2012 5:17 PM EDT

          Doesn't matter if it's a story about an ancient artifact, Santa Claus, a fresco discovered in an ancient church, or a dog that saved a baby, some people will immediately leave comments proclaiming that they just KNOW that there is no God and that religious belief is bunk. Then some religious types, who likewise just KNOW, will counter with, "Follow the one, true path and be saved!" What's the point? People who have no sense of "God" or the spiritual will never be persuaded otherwise, nor will people who do have a sense of "God", soul, and immortality.

          The former often mock and deride that latter, even for something so simple as saying, "God bless her!", and the latter often try to "remedy" the problem by trying to "save" everyone or getting laws passed that make people toe their line, even when not of their faith or any faith. Uber atheists and uber religious people are pains in the butt. In between are masses of good people who also do or do not believe in God, but they just live their lives and are able to connect with humanity on other levels and find commonality thereby.

          Atheism and religiosity, though shared by groups, are ultimately PERSONAL experiences, born from observation, intuition, and experience. Why don't we just KEEP them that way?

            Reply#56 - Tue Sep 4, 2012 5:19 AM EDT

            Got to have something to argue about or the vines would shrivel and die

              #56.1 - Tue Sep 4, 2012 10:25 AM EDT
              Reply

              Interesting, artifacts that are older than the monolithic religions claim for the age of the whole world. Maybe God put them there to test our faith like many Mormon's claim is where the dinosaurs came from. If the Earth was created 6000-10000 years ago how do things like this keep turning up everywhere? Even the city of Jericho has been continously occupied for longer that the oldest estimates of the age of the Earth by the "Young Earth" creationists. When will they just face facts?

                Reply#57 - Thu Dec 27, 2012 8:40 AM EST
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