Monumental Structure Found at Petra with Satellite Images
BIRMINGHAM, ALABAMA—Sarah Parcak of the University of Alabama at
Birmingham, and Christopher Tuttle, executive director of the Council of
American Overseas Research Centers, spotted a monumental structure at Petra, a
2,500-year-old Nabatean city in southern Jordan, using high-resolution
satellite imagery and pictures taken with aerial drones.
(Photo by I. LaBianca)
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National Geographic reports
that the structure consists of a building measuring roughly 28 feet square,
centered on a rectangular, paved platform, surrounded by a larger,
184-by-161-foot, platform. The building faced a row of columns and a staircase
to the east. Pottery recovered from the site dates to the mid-second century
B.C. Parcak and Tuttle say that the platform’s design is unique in the ancient
city, and may have been used for ceremonial purposes in the early days of the
settlement. “I’ve worked in Petra for 20 years, and I knew that something was
there, but it’s certainly legitimate to call this a discovery,” Tuttle said.
For more, go to "Neolithic Community Centers - Wadi Faynan, Jordan."
(Resources: Archaeology Magazine, 09/06/2016)
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