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Dr. Bryant Wood describes some of the work from the first week at Khirbet el-Maqatir

Khirbet el-Maqatir 2009, Week One

On May 29, 2009, a hearty band of 21 ABR staff members and volunteers completed the first week of a two-week excavation season at Khirbet el-Maqatir, 10 miles north of Jerusalem. They were at times joined by local volunteers from Jerusalem, the Ofra Field School, and the Yad Hashmona Guest House. ABR is resuming its work at the site after a hiatus of nine years. The three-acre Amorite fortress excavated by ABR teams from 1995 to 2000 meets the Biblical requirements of Joshua 78 and thus is the most likely candidate for Joshua's Ai.

Efforts this season are focused on the west, south, and east walls, and on several structures inside the fortress. On the east, Eugene Merrill (Dallas Theological Seminary) discovered possible bedrock pavement that may be a section of a ring road which circled the site inside the fortress wall. On the west, Pastor James Luther (Florida) uncovered a five-meter-long section of a one-meter-wide wall that is part of a substantial structure inside the fortress. Dig Director Bryant Wood exposed several walls that were part of a building complex just inside the main gate on the north side of the fortress. One of the guest volunteers working in Dr. Wood's square found a large section of a pithos rim and neck which can be accurately dated to the 15th century BC, the time of the Conquest.

image.axd1262009 ABR dig team in the gate of the fortress at Khirbet el-Maqatir.

image.axd127Volunteer Krista Davis (Dallas Theological Seminary) with her find of the neck of a 15th-century BC pithos.

image.axd128Pavement discovered on the east side of Khirbet el-Maqatir, possibly part of a "ring road" around the inside of the fortress.

Close-up of the 15th-century BC pithos rim and neck discovered at the ABR excavation at Khirbet el-Maqatir on May 29, 2009.

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