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--- En date de : Mar 28.10.08, Mark Hall <[log in to unmask]> a écrit :
De: Mark Hall <[log in to unmask]>
Objet: King Solomon's Mines
À: [log in to unmask]
Date: Mardi 28 Octobre 2008, 22h41

Science News Share    Blog    Cite Print    Email    BookmarkKing
Solomon's Copper Mines?
ScienceDaily (Oct. 28, 2008) — Did the Bible's King David and his son
Solomon control the copper industry in present-day southern Jordan?
Though that remains an open question, the possibility is raised once
again by research reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences.


Led by Thomas Levy of UC San Diego and Mohammad Najjar of Jordan's
Friends of Archaeology, an international team of archaeologists has
excavated an ancient copper-production center at Khirbat en-Nahas down
to virgin soil, through more than 20 feet of industrial smelting debris,
or slag. The 2006 dig has brought up new artifacts and with them a new
suite of radiocarbon dates placing the bulk of industrial-scale
production at Khirbat en-Nahas in the 10th century BCE – in line with
biblical narrative on the legendary rule of David and Solomon. The new
data pushes back the archaeological chronology some three centuries
earlier than the current scholarly consensus.

The research also documents a spike in metallurgic activity at the site
during the 9th century BCE, which may also support the history of the
Edomites as related by the Bible.

Khirbat en-Nahas, which means "ruins of copper" in Arabic, is in the
lowlands of a desolate, arid region south of the Dead Sea in what was
once Edom and is today Jordan's Faynan district. The Hebrew Bible (or
Old Testament) identifies the area with the Kingdom of Edom, foe of
ancient Israel.

For years, scholars have argued whether the Edomites were sufficiently
organized by the 10th to 9th centuries BCE to seriously threaten the
neighboring Israelites as a true "kingdom." Between the World Wars,
during the "Golden Age" of biblical archaeology, scholars explored,
as
Levy describes it, with a trowel in one hand and Bible in the other,
seeking to fit their Holy Land findings into the sacred story. Based on
his 1930s surveys, American archaeologist Nelson Glueck even asserted
that he had found King Solomon's mines in Faynan/Edom. By the 1980s,
however, Glueck's claim had been largely dismissed. A consensus had
emerged that the Bible was heavily edited in the 5th century BCE, long
after the supposed events, while British excavations of the Edomite
highlands in the 1970s-80s suggested the Iron Age had not even come to
Edom until the 7th century BCE.

rest at

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/10/081027174545.htm