An excavation square was opened, revealing a wall (W100; length c. 2.5 m; Fig. 1) that was oriented north–south. The wall, set atop a foundation of small stones that were well-bonded with brown soil, was built of a single course of kurkar stones, some of which were dressed (c. 0.2 × 0.3 × 0.4 m). The northern end of the wall was disturbed, probably due to modern construction activity. A surface paved with different size stones (L501; width c. 1 m), whose western part was destroyed, was east of and alongside W100; it was probably the floor that abutted W100. The finds included worn potsherds that dated to the Byzantine and Early Islamic periods (fifth–seventh centuries CE).