1. Scattering of worked and natural flint artifacts, probably not in situ.
2. Remains of a farming-terrace wall, preserved five courses high. Ruinous farming terraces are discerned nearby.
3. Remains of a quarry on a bedrock cliff that is dated to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries CE. Rock-cuttings are evident where stones were detached from the bedrock and nearby—quarrying debris.
4. A channel hewn in a bedrock surface, becoming wider toward the north (Fig. 2). A rectangular rock-cutting (?) in a bedrock surface (0.7 × 1.0 m), which may be an opening of a cave or an installation, was noted next to the channel.
5. A row of five large fieldstones near the Nahal Zofim channel.
6. A tall stone heap composed of small and medium-sized fieldstones.
7. A square plastered cistern hewn in a bedrock surface and adapted for use as a cave, possibly for burial. The cistern has a square vertical shaft with rounded corners (Fig. 3). A broad rectangular opening (Fig. 4) was hewn when the cistern had been converted to a cave. This cistern may have been documented in the past (Survey of Jerusalem, the Northeastern Sector, Site 165). A treading floor (?) of a winepress was discerned next to the cistern’s opening. Rock-cuttings were documented on the western side of the bedrock surface.
8. A large elongated clearance heap composed of large stones; nearby—numerous stone concentrations. 
9. A small circular clearance heap composed of small and medium-sized stones.
10. A large quarry in a bedrock cliff, dating to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries CE. Signs of rock-cuttings are evident where stones were detached from the bedrock. Worn potsherds, mostly dating to the Roman period, are scattered nearby.
11. A round rock-cutting in the bedrock, possibly a limekiln that is covered with alluvium and vegetation.
12. Remains of a large quarry on a bedrock cliff, dating to the nineteenth and twentieth century CE. The signs of rock-cuttings are evidence of stones detached from the bedrock.
13. A rectangular structure built of dressed stones and preserved a single course high (Fig. 5). A late plaster and cement repair was discerned on the inside of the northern wall. The building may have been adapted for use as a pool or water reservoir.
14. Remains of a large quarry on a bedrock cliff, dating to the nineteenth and twentieth centuries CE. Signs of rock-cuttings are evidence of stones detached from the bedrock.
15. A field wall oriented north–south, built of medium-sized fieldstones and preserved a single course high.
16. A small, elliptical clearance heap composed of small and medium-sized stones.
17. A tall, round clearance heap composed of medium and large stones, possibly a ruinous building. Potsherds dating to the Second Temple era were found among the stones in the heap.
18. A farming terrace wall built of two rows of large stones with smaller stones on top of them. Many non-diagnostic potsherds are scattered in the vicinity.
19. A well-preserved farming-terrace wall, built of medium-sized fieldstones, which survived to a maximum of ten courses high. The wall is parallel to the terrace wall in Site 18.
20. A small circular clearance heap composed of small and medium-sized stones at the end of a low farming terrace.
21. A small circular clearance heap composed of small and medium-sized stones.
22. A field wall, aligned east–west and built of a single row of large fieldstones, was preserved a single course high.
23. A low farming terrace wall built of medium-sized fieldstones and preserved two courses high. A stone clearance heap was documented at the western end of the terrace. 
24. A low farming terrace wall built of medium-sized fieldstones and preserved two–four courses high. Potsherds are scattered in the vicinity.
25. A clearance heap composed of small and medium-sized stones on a bedrock outcrop. Worn potsherds are scattered in the vicinity.