TY - JOUR
T1 - Hunter-gatherer-builders
T2 - 70 years of research at the Natufian hamlet of Eynan-Mallaha (upper Jordan Valley, Israel)
AU - Bocquentin, Fanny
AU - Caron-Laviolette, Elisa
AU - Fourchet, Niels
AU - Davin, Laurent
AU - Whitford, Brent
AU - Heccan, Louise
AU - Le Gueut, Erwan
AU - Bessenay-Prolonge, Julie
AU - Bôrras, Aurélie Montagne
AU - Weissbrod, Lior
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/6
Y1 - 2025/6
N2 - Since 1955, research at Eynan-Mallaha has unraveled an exceptionally thick, well-preserved, and detailed archaeological sequence spanning from the Early to the Final Natufian. Among other important findings, the site has yielded a relatively high number of stone constructions, comprising semi-circular and circular semi-subterranean buildings, divulging a clear evolutionary trend in early building activity. Here we review the work that has been carried out in regard to Eynan-Mallaha's constructions, from the site's discovery to the latest discoveries from our renewed excavations. Archival records from earlier excavations at the site are considered here in detail for the first time using digitization tools and high-resolution data acquisition techniques. Our focus is on a series of nested buildings (Loci 148–131–51-62) occupied at different times during the Early Natufian, which is re-evaluated here in light of cumulative and more fine-grained stratigraphic data, architectural analysis from the emerging field of Building Archaeology, and GIS-aided analysis combining archival and recent datasets. We argue for the development of a strong sense of place and permanence at Eynan-Mallaha, attested by the nuanced series of continuities in and modifications to the documented constructions from one generation to another through the constantly repaired and recycled built-up space.
AB - Since 1955, research at Eynan-Mallaha has unraveled an exceptionally thick, well-preserved, and detailed archaeological sequence spanning from the Early to the Final Natufian. Among other important findings, the site has yielded a relatively high number of stone constructions, comprising semi-circular and circular semi-subterranean buildings, divulging a clear evolutionary trend in early building activity. Here we review the work that has been carried out in regard to Eynan-Mallaha's constructions, from the site's discovery to the latest discoveries from our renewed excavations. Archival records from earlier excavations at the site are considered here in detail for the first time using digitization tools and high-resolution data acquisition techniques. Our focus is on a series of nested buildings (Loci 148–131–51-62) occupied at different times during the Early Natufian, which is re-evaluated here in light of cumulative and more fine-grained stratigraphic data, architectural analysis from the emerging field of Building Archaeology, and GIS-aided analysis combining archival and recent datasets. We argue for the development of a strong sense of place and permanence at Eynan-Mallaha, attested by the nuanced series of continuities in and modifications to the documented constructions from one generation to another through the constantly repaired and recycled built-up space.
KW - Archives
KW - Building archaeology
KW - Early architecture
KW - Eynan-Mallaha
KW - Field work
KW - GIS
KW - Natufian
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001878009&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ara.2025.100618
DO - 10.1016/j.ara.2025.100618
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105001878009
SN - 2352-2267
VL - 42
JO - Archaeological Research in Asia
JF - Archaeological Research in Asia
M1 - 100618
ER -