![]() ![]() 1200–550 B.C.), and continuing more than 1,000 years into the Byzantine period, people would settle somewhere with such a rocky, shallow coastline and no harbor, a place where farming and trade would have been difficult. ![]() ![]() They couldn’t understand why, beginning in the Late Bronze Age (ca. Since the first excavations in the 1960s, archaeologists have found the site, called Tel Shikmona in Hebrew, or Tell es Samak, “Hill of the Fish,” in Arabic, curious. Birds and fishermen perch on the numerous rocks that dot the shallow water, which is navigable only by the smallest of boats. From the top of the mound, or tel, a view of the sea stretches out. Not far from the foot of Mount Carmel and the industrial port city of Haifa on Israel’s Mediterranean coast sits a grassy mound dotted with ruins of buildings and walls, the accumulation of more than three millennia of settlement. ![]()
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