TELL
RAFFAAN
Tell
Raffaan (Tall Raffan) is an archaeological site in Iraq, in ancient
Upper Mesopotamia, in the valley of the Tigris River.
Archaeological
research :
Exploration of the site began in 1984 as part of the Eski Mosul
Dam Salvage Project, an international archaeological salvage operation
organized by the Iraqi Directorate of Antiquities due to the building
of a dam on the Tigris River. Excavations on Tell Raffaan and in
its vicinity were conducted by an expedition from the Polish Centre
of Mediterranean Archaeology University of Warsaw. Piotr Bielinski
directed the archaeological works, while Ryszard F. Mazurowski and
Waldemar Chmielewski headed the field survey team, which identified
Paleolithic sites on the hills surrounding the micro-region. The
Polish expedition also carried out work at the site of Tell Rijim,
located in the same micro-region.
At
its highest point, Tell Raffaan rose 6.5 meters above the level
of the Tigris. The research was conducted only in the eastern part
of the tell since a modern cemetery occupied the western one. Only
one archaeological layer was identified, dating to the Early Uruk
period (second half of the 4th millennium BC). The excavations yielded
numerous fragments of pottery as well as obsidian and flint tools.
On the slope, there was a skeletal grave in stone setting, furnished
with three undecorated cups similar to the pottery found in other
parts of the site. This part of the tell was badly eroded; no architectural
remains were uncovered.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Tell_Raffaan