The following antiquities were documented on the eastern and northern fringes of Khirbat Beit Sahur (Kloner 2000: Site 53, p. 76*): farming terraces (Sites 1, 7, 17, 18), quarries (Sites 3, 11, 15), remains of an olive press and bodeda (Sites 5, 19), rock-hewn installations (Sites 14, 21) whose purpose is unclear, rock-hewn cisterns (Sites 6, 12, 23), architectural remains (Site 13), caves (Sites 2, 4, 9, 10), a limekiln (Site 16), a cairn (Site 8), a rock-cut tomb (Site 22), a water reservoir (Site 20) and a scatter of potsherds from the Iron Age and later periods, mainly from the Roman and Byzantine periods.
 
Extensive areas were surveyed west, east and south of Khirbat Umm Leisun (Kloner 2000: Site 103, p. 93*) where the following sites were documented: farming terraces (Sites 28, 31, 48), a dam built of two rows of fieldstones in the wadi channel (Site 55), a variety of rock-cuttings (Sites 37, 41, 47, 49, 51), cupmarks (Sites 25, 45, 65), winepresses (Sites 24, 26, 63), numerous hewn cisterns (Sites 38–40, 42, 44, 50, 59, 64) that have square or circular vertical shaft openings, partially hewn natural caves that are currently used as dwellings or for sheltering animals (Sites 29, 30, 32–34, 36, 53, 54, 56, 57, 61, 62), a crushing basin (yam) of an olive press, not in situ (Site 46), remains of a vaulted building whose façade is built of ashlars (Site 43), a hewn tomb (Site 60), a watchman’s hut built of large fieldstones (Site 35), a stone clearance heap (Site 27), an elongated elliptical rock-cut water reservoir whose ceiling is vaulted and its sides are coated with a thick layer of light colored plaster (Site 52), and a scatter of potsherds dating to Iron Age II (Site 58).
 
Some of the surveyed sites belong to Khirbat Beit Sahur, to Khirbat Umm Leisun and to other settlements in the vicinity, and they attest to the agricultural activity that characterizes the hinterland sites of Jerusalem.