Area A. The area yielded a broad wall (W115; width c. 2.5 m; Figs. 2, 3) preserved to the height of a single course built of two rows of large fieldstones (average dimensions 0.3 × 0.4 m) encasing a fill of small and medium-sized stones and dark-brown clay soil. The north section of the wall was damaged, probably due to plowing. Only non-diagnostic flint artifacts were recovered; they bore signs of weathering and water abrasion, indicating that they were not found in situ. The wall may have been part of a structure or a path.

 

Area B. Fourteen excavation squares were opened; six of them were evidently disturbed when earth containing ancient finds was removed to cover and level a neighboring plot. The remaining eight squares yielded well-preserved in situ flint artifacts. The artifacts, which were discovered in a layer of black clay soil (max. thickness 1 m; Fig. 4), included flint chunksunworked raw material (Fig. 5)—flint-mining debris and flakes. Above this layer was a layer of soil rich in flint artifacts (Fig. 6) that was removed during mechanical clearance of the surface prior to the excavation. It included a pit with debitage (Fig. 7) that yielded hundreds of flint items, mainly flakes and primary items, unfinished bifacial tools (Fig. 8) and tools that broke while being worked (Fig. 9). The finds comprised mainly adzesbifacial tools with a flat ventral face and a convex dorsal face (Fig. 10)—dated from the late Pottery Neolithic period (Wadi Rabah culture) to the late Chalcolithic period (late sixthlate fifth millennium BCE). Similar tools from these periods were discovered in previous excavations at Givat Rabbi. Nevertheless, findings from excavations conducted in the region attest to human activity in earlier periods as well.