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Date
of Submission: |
30/06/2000 |
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Criteria: |
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Category:
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Cultural
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Submitted
by: |
Delegation
Permanente d'Israel aupres de l'UNESCO |
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Coordinates:
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Lat.
30°18' N / Long. 34°44' E |
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Ref.: |
1488 |
Mount Karkom is in the southern Negev desert
at the northern edge of Nahal Paran and provides among the world's best
examples of rock engravings. Access to the mountain is difficult because of its
sheer cliffs, which rise about 300 meters above the surroundings. The prominent
plateau, some 800 meters above sea level, can be reached by means of two main
ancient paths: one includes a passage of steps partly hewn in antiquity, and
the other is snakelike, with concentrations of some of the some best rock
engravings and pillars in a desert environment. An impressive 100 plus
Paleolithic sites, mostly from the Middle Paleolithic period, were found on Mount
Karkom. An abundance of excellent quality flints was found on the surface. Many
flint tool workshops, containing numerous cores and flakes, as well as traces
of huts from the period were found. Because of the desert conditions, the in
situ sites and flakes and tools scattered around cores were found in an
excellent state of preservation. The material collected so far indicates that
in the Paleolithic period the mountain was an excellent source of raw material
for the production of flint tools and an important meeting place. In the Late
Chalcolithic, Early Bronze, and beginning of the Middle Bronze ages, the
mountain was used as a pilgrimage, ceremonial, and cultic site: numerous rock
engravings of religious significance were carved and massebot were set up. Many
stone circles and tumuli were also erected, as was a structure that can
probably be identified as a temple. After the period of intense occupation, the
plateau was abandoned for about 800 years. According to the building remains,
it was next occupied by desert inhabitants, who probably did not settle here
permanently. The importance of the mountain is indicated by its finds,
particularly from the Bronze Age Complex. The burial tumuli, stone circles and
other megalithic structures, massebot, and rock engravings reveal that the
mountain was sacred as an important cultic and religious center. The mountain
exemplifies some of the world's best rock engravings, more than 100 of which
have so far been identified from the Neolithic, Chalcolithic, Early and Middle
Bronze Ages, Nabatean, Roman-Byzantine and beginning of the Early Arab periods.
Outstanding here is the fact that the enclosures of the late Chalcolithis,
Early Bronze, and the beginning of the Middle Bronze ages have rich remains of
material culture together with an abundance of rock engravings. Similar
examples of rock art in sites in the Sinai and Jordanian plateau are part of
the same collection.