UNEARTHING THE PAST SINCE 1900
  • BECOME A MEMBER
  • RENEW
  • GIVE NOW
  • SEARCH
  • ONLINE PORTAL
  • American Society of Overseas Research (ASOR)American Society of Overseas Research (ASOR)
  • ABOUT
    • WELCOME FROM ASOR OFFICERS
    • HISTORY OF ASOR
    • MISSION, BYLAWS, & STRATEGIC PLAN
    • Board of Trustees
    • COMMITTEES
    • POLICIES
    • FINANCIAL DOCUMENTS
    • MEDIA RELEASES
    • CONTACT US
  • CULTURAL
    HERITAGE
    • ABOUT CULTURAL HERITAGE INITIATIVES
    • UPDATES
    • PAST GRANTS
    • TUTORIALS
    • Who We Are
  • ANNUAL
    MEETING
    • REGISTRATION
    • HOTEL RESERVATIONS
    • ANNUAL MEETING SCHEDULES
    • SPONSOR & EXHIBIT
    • ASOR Online Library
    • HONORS & AWARDS
    • ANNUAL MEETING SCHOLARSHIPS
    • PAST & FUTURE ANNUAL MEETINGS
  • MEMBERSHIP
    & RESOURCES
    • INDIVIDUAL MEMBERSHIPS
    • INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERSHIPS
    • NEWS@ASOR
    • PAST ASOR NEWS, MONTH BY MONTH
    • AFFILIATED PROJECTS
    • AFFILIATED RESEARCH CENTERS
    • ARCHIVES
    • ONLINE RESOURCES
      • PHOTO COLLECTION
    • EARLY CAREER MEMBER RESOURCES
  • FELLOWSHIPS
    & GRANTS
    • SCHOLARSHIPS FOR FIELDWORK PARTICIPATION
    • GRANTS FOR ARCHAEOLOGICAL PROJECTS
    • RESEARCH FELLOWSHIPS FOR MEMBERS
    • MEMBERSHIP & ANNUAL MEETING SCHOLARSHIPS
    • ASOR-AFFILIATED RESEARCH CENTERS FELLOWSHIPS
    • OTHER FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMS
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • BOOK SERIES & MONOGRAPHS
    • BULLETIN OF ASOR
    • JOURNAL OF CUNEIFORM STUDIES
    • MAARAV
    • NEAR EASTERN ARCHAEOLOGY
    • THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST TODAY
    • News@ASOR
    • LEVANTINE CERAMICS PROJECT
  • FRIENDS
    OF ASOR
    • Webinars
    • TOURS
    • THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST TODAY
    • ASOR ONLINE LIBRARY
  • Donate
    • FY25 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS
    • LIFETIME HONOR ROLL OF DONORS
    • ASOR LEGACY CIRCLE
    • WAYS TO DONATE
BASOR 393 banner

 SHARE

 
 
 
 
 

NEWS@ASOR E-NEWSLETTER

ANCIENT NEAR EAST TODAY E-NEWSLETTER

PAST ASOR NEWS, MONTH BY MONTH

ASOR LEGACY CIRCLE MEMBERS

LIFETIME HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

FY25 HONOR ROLL OF DONORS

ASOR ANNUAL MEETING

Table of Contents for Bulletin of ASOR 393 (May 2025)

You can receive BASOR (and other ASOR publications) through an ASOR Membership.
Please e-mail the Membership office if you have any questions.
BASOR 393 article 1 banner

Pp. 1-22: “Nabatean Tent Sites on the Ruhot Plain, Central Negev, and Nomadic Visibility,” by Maayan Margulis and Steven A Rosen

Nabatean campsites, reflecting the desert nomadic pastoral component of Nabatean society, constitute part of the larger and better-known Nabatean system of caravan routes and associated sites, in addition to village and urban centers dating between the late 4th century b.c.e. and the early 3rd century c.e. Campsites have rarely been explored in depth, although numerous small Nabatean camps and campsites have been registered in many surveys in the Negev. Four such sites in the Ruhot Plain, north of the Makhtesh Ramon, are detailed here. Architectural, geographic, and ceramic analyses show that these sites contrast with those associated with the classic Nabatean Incense Road, and for that matter, sedentary Nabatean society. The sites can be compared to nomadic systems associated with earlier Timnian, and later Byzantine and Early Islamic desert pastoral systems, as well as modern desert societies. Together, the materials offer a perspective on a little explored aspect of Nabatean society, the pastoral nomadic component, and an example of the archaeology of pastoral camps, often claimed to be inaccessible to archaeological study.

ASOR Members with online access: log into ASOR’s Online Portal here. Once logged in, click the JOURNALS tab in the top navigation bar. Tutorials for how to log in to the Online Portal as well as how to navigate to the Portal Journals page can be found here.
BASOR 393 article 2 banner

Pp. 23-43: “Olive Oil Production in the North-East Temple of Canaanite Lachish,” by Itamar Weissbein and Yosef Garfinkel

This article presents the results of the 2023 excavation at Tel Lachish, which re-examined Installation BB1132, uncovered in the central hall of a Late Bronze III structure dubbed the North-East Temple. As a result of the recent excavation, the installation was identified as an olive oil press. The article discusses the significance of olive oil production in Late Bronze Age Lachish and the possible role that its production played in the cultic activity conducted in the structure.

ASOR Members with online access: log into ASOR’s Online Portal here. Once logged in, click the JOURNALS tab in the top navigation bar. Tutorials for how to log in to the Online Portal as well as how to navigate to the Portal Journals page can be found here.
BASOR 393 article 3 banner

Pp. 45-55: “Qaṭrāyīṯ and the Linguistic History of Ancient East Arabia,” by Ahmad Al-Jallad

Qaṭrāyīṯ is a Syriac term that refers to the vernacular of east Arabia in the Early Islamic period. This linguistic variety is known from a small collection of lexical glosses in Syriac sources. Recently, Mario Kozah (2021, 2022) collected and examined about 40 Qaṭrāyīṯ lexical items, based on which he declared Qaṭrāyīṯ to be a dialect of Arabic. The purpose of this study is to re-assess the evidence, using a sounder linguistic methodology, to better determine the etymological origin of the Qaṭrāyīṯ vocabulary and, as much as possible, its phylogenetic position in Semitic. The results of this study increase the resolution of our image of east Arabia’s early linguistic history.

ASOR Members with online access: log into ASOR’s Online Portal here. Once logged in, click the JOURNALS tab in the top navigation bar. Tutorials for how to log in to the Online Portal as well as how to navigate to the Portal Journals page can be found here.
BASOR 393 article 4 banner

Pp. 57-78: “Reflections on the Circulation of Extraordinary Items in Early Chalcolithic Southwest Asia: Sourcing the Obsidian Mirror and Giant Blade Core of Kabri (Israel),” by Ron Shimelmitz, Tristan Carter, Branden Cesare Rizzuto, Rose Moir, Sariel Shalev, and Danny Rosenberg

The 6th-millennium B.C. obsidian mirror and giant blade core from Kabri, northern Israel, have long been considered epitomes of Southwest Asian Early Chalcolithic technical and artistic virtuosity. Nevertheless, even almost 70 years after their discovery, they are yet to be integrated into the growing body of research on obsidian circulation from Anatolian sources to prehistoric communities of the southern Levant. This paper presents for the first time the results of a provenience study employing handheld X-ray fluorescence spectrometry (hhXRF), showing that the obsidian used to fashion the mirror derives from East Göllü Dağ, central Anatolia, while the raw material used to make the giant blade core originates from the Bingöl B source in eastern Anatolia. Drawing on these results, it is suggested that the research of the obsidian trade and Early Chalcolithic social networks implicated in it can benefit from a more multifaceted distinction between sources, technologies, and end-products. Situating this work within the recent turn to more holistic characterization studies, alongside employing the theoretical lens of Joan Gero (1989), the authors argue that the mirror and blade core represent “extraordinary objects,” well-suited for the mediation of social relations in the context of emergent political and economic complexity.

ASOR Members with online access: log into ASOR’s Online Portal here. Once logged in, click the JOURNALS tab in the top navigation bar. Tutorials for how to log in to the Online Portal as well as how to navigate to the Portal Journals page can be found here.
BASOR 393 article 5 banner

Pp. 79-97: “The Vanished Fire Temple of Sarab-e Murt: A Tentative Interpretation of the Archaeological Evidence,” by Yousef Moradi

This paper presents the results of archaeological excavations at the southwestern site of Sarab-e Murt in western Iran. The investigations, conducted in 2008, revealed intriguing remnants of a significant sacred building, now obliterated due to the construction of a dam. All that remains of this structure are a few fragmentary walls, portions of a plastered floor, two clay installations, and five gypsum stepped stands. The architectural remnants are positioned in two distinct sections. In Section B, the structures are too limited in scope to allow for a comprehensive understanding of its original layout. Conversely, Section A, despite the fragmentary nature of the material, offers a more promising avenue for interpretation. By drawing parallels with well-preserved Sasanian Chahar-Taqs documented in other locations, a tentative reconstruction of this section as a Chahar-Taq with a bay on each side becomes conceivable. These archaeological findings suggest the existence of a Sasanian fire temple, distinguished by its unique architectural design. This temple served as a revered place of worship for the local Zoroastrian community in the Gilan-e Gharb Plain during the 4th–5th centuries C.E., and possibly even slightly earlier.

ASOR Members with online access: log into ASOR’s Online Portal here. Once logged in, click the JOURNALS tab in the top navigation bar. Tutorials for how to log in to the Online Portal as well as how to navigate to the Portal Journals page can be found here.
BASOR 393 article 6 banner

Pp. 99-153: “The Sacred Precinct of Tel Dan Revisited,” by Levana Tsfania-Zias

The sacred precinct or “High Place” of Tel Dan has been the subject of several studies since its excavation by Avraham Biran a half-century ago. The biblical account attributes its construction to Jeroboam I, at the northern border of his new Israelite kingdom. This account was taken at face value by Biran and by subsequent researchers. The stratified monumental features of the sacred precinct were attributed mainly to the 10th–8th centuries b.c.e. and its construction phases attributed to the more powerful, long-reigning Israelite kings mentioned in the biblical text—Jeroboam I, Ahab, and Jeroboam II. However, an analysis of the stratigraphy, architectural features, and the material culture of the Persian, Hellenistic, and Roman periods reveals that much of what was assigned to the Iron Age should be reassigned to those later periods. Much of the material culture of the Tel Dan sacred precinct has parallels in Phoenician material culture.

ASOR Members with online access: log into ASOR’s Online Portal here. Once logged in, click the JOURNALS tab in the top navigation bar. Tutorials for how to log in to the Online Portal as well as how to navigate to the Portal Journals page can be found here.
BASOR 393 article 7 banner

Pp. 155-168: “Remarks on the Ugarit Diplomatic Relations with Ḫatti and Egypt in the Late 13th Century B.C.,” by Eduardo Torrecilla

This paper addresses the seemingly contradictory foreign policy of Ugarit in the late 13th century B.C., since one can find Ugarit kings’ declarations of vassalage to Egypt while apparently being Hittite subordinates. It is stressed that in an empire-vassal relationship, a powerful subordinate is aware of having a strong hand, albeit not the upper one. The subordinate needs to defend their own interests, even when the counterparts know that the hierarchy is ultimately to be respected. Still, Ugarit no doubt remained loyal to Ḫatti, which welcomed the excellent relations between the courts of Ugarit and Egypt. Thus, the Hittite reprimands found in the House of Urtēnu archive do not necessarily tell of the sovereign’s weakness, but merely of two parties bargaining or “haggling” in search of a deal that better suits and protects each other’s interests.

ASOR Members with online access: log into ASOR’s Online Portal here. Once logged in, click the JOURNALS tab in the top navigation bar. Tutorials for how to log in to the Online Portal as well as how to navigate to the Portal Journals page can be found here.

BASOR 393 article 8 banner

Pp. 169-188: “An Intermediate Bronze Age Bead Assemblage from a Burial Cave at Givʿat Reḥelim (Tell es-Safa) in Northern Israel,” by Shlomit Bechar, Anastasia Shapiro, Yinon Shivtiel, and Uri Berger

Givʿat Reḥelim (Tell es-Safa) is located on the outskirts of Kibbutz Ayyelet HaShaḥar, in the southern part of the Hula Valley, in the northern part of modern-day Israel. About 50 caves were surveyed on the hill, including several intact burial caves dating to the Intermediate Bronze Age. A small excavation in one of the caves exposed a rich funerary assemblage, including dozens of beads made of carnelian, faience, red coral, and stone. Some of these materials are non-endemic to the southern Levant, and some of the beads were made using technologies that are foreign to the region; these facts indicate trade contacts with distant manufacturing centers. Determining their locations will shed more light on the complex international trade systems of the Intermediate Bronze Age (2500–2000 B.C.E.) in the Levant.

ASOR Members with online access: log into ASOR’s Online Portal here. Once logged in, click the JOURNALS tab in the top navigation bar. Tutorials for how to log in to the Online Portal as well as how to navigate to the Portal Journals page can be found here.

BROWSE THE NEWS ARCHIVE

  • FOA Webinar: Carl Walsh
  • Call for Early Career Scholars Committee Members
  • Friends of ASOR Tours: Philadelphia 2026
  • FOA Webinar: Benyamin Storchan

Latest Posts from @ASORResearch

asor_research

Initiating and supporting research of the history and cultures of the Near East and wider Mediterranean world.


At Tall Hisban in Jordan, the Lawrence T. Geraty C
At Tall Hisban in Jordan, the Lawrence T. Geraty Community Archaeology Endowment has supported educational opportunities, heritage events, and community engagement. In 2025, the Geraty Endowment helped make possible the Hisban Heritage Festival, student-led community history projects, and the Madaba Region Heritage Internship. Read more in this grant report: https://www.asor.org/news/2026/01/geraty-grant-report
#Jordan #Madaba #Heritage


ASOR’s room block at the Hilton Chicago for the 20
ASOR’s room block at the Hilton Chicago for the 2026 Annual Meeting is now open. Registered Annual Meeting attendees can reserve a room at the discounted rate of $159 (plus tax) at this iconic downtown hotel overlooking Grant Park and Lake Michigan. To make your reservations, click here: https://www.asor.org/am/2026/hotel-city-2026


Join us for the next FOA webinar on Wednesday, Feb
Join us for the next FOA webinar on Wednesday, February 4th at 12:30pm ET: "Unearthing an Imperially Glorious Byzantine Church near Bet Shemesh: From Fieldwork to Virtual Reality," presented by Benyamin Storchan. In the heart of the Holy Land, just 15 miles southwest of Jerusalem, lies one of the most remarkable Byzantine churches discovered in recent decades. The archaeological excavations at the Church of the Glorious Martyr unearthed a fascinating five-century story of faith and pilgrimage, yet the greatest mystery remains unsolved: who was the Glorious Martyr venerated in the sacred crypt? Read more and register here: https://www.asor.org/news/2026/01/webinar-storchan


Call for papers: The William F. Albright Institute
Call for papers: The William F. Albright Institute of Archaeological Research announces the 25th Annual Sean W. Dever Memorial Prize. The prize awards $750 for the best conference paper in Syro-Palestinian or Biblical Archaeology.

Eligibility:
• Ph.D. candidates (as of Spring 2026)
• Paper must be in English
• Must be an unpublished/not prepared for publication conference paper

Deadline: February 15, 2026
Winner announced: March 9, 2026
Apply via the Albright Fellowships Portal: https://aiar.org/fellowships


The deadline to apply for ASOR's 2026-27 Mesopotam
The deadline to apply for ASOR's 2026-27 Mesopotamian Fellowships is Monday, January 26! These fellowships are primarily intended to support fieldwork/research on ancient Mesopotamian culture carried out in the Middle East. Apply now: https://www.asor.org/fellowships/mesopotamian-fellowship/


Our #ObjectoftheWeek: A limestone statue of an eag
Our #ObjectoftheWeek: A limestone statue of an eagle wrestling with a serpent found at Khirbet et-Tannur, an ancient Nabataean temple in southern Jordan. ca. 100-200 CE. CAM 1939.222. Photo credit: Cincinnati Art Museum.
#Archaeology #Jordan #Nabataean


Since the Neolithic, mudbrick architecture has bee
Since the Neolithic, mudbrick architecture has been one of the most widespread building traditions across the world. But a mudbrick is more than a structural unit: it is also a repository of information. Read the newest ANE Today by Marta Lorenzon by clicking the link (https://anetoday.org/mudbrick-architecture-meaning/) in our bio.
#Architecture #Mudbrick


Last summer, Helen Wong joined the University of P
Last summer, Helen Wong joined the University of Palermo Archaeological Project at Motya, an island near western Sicily. Helen, a PhD candidate at University of Pennsylvania, was the digital archaeology specialist on the project and helped with the ongoing geophysical survey mapping the ancient city. Read her report here: https://www.asor.org/news/2026/01/fieldwork-report-wong
#Archaeology #Survey #Sicily


Be sure to watch the next FOA webinar TOMORROW at
Be sure to watch the next FOA webinar TOMORROW at 7:00pm ET presented by Dr. Sarah Wenner: "Experiencing Khirbet et-Tannur: The Story of a Nabatean Temple from the Second through 21st Century." Register for free if you haven't already: https://buff.ly/CtzwPOm
#Jordan #Nabatean


ASOR is putting together a map of where our member
ASOR is putting together a map of where our members have worked in the world. You're invited to submit your own excavations, survey, laboratory, or museum and conservation projects to the map with stories and photos. Click the link in our bio to complete a brief survey to add yourself to the map: https://buff.ly/LYYJVlZ


The Honors and Awards Committee seeks nominations
The Honors and Awards Committee seeks nominations for at least 3 candidates. Committee members will serve a three-year term with the possibility of two consecutive terms. Nominees must fill out the online form by January 30. Learn more by clicking the link in our bio: https://www.asor.org/news/2025/12/honors-awards-members-call


This past summer, a group from Johns Hopkins Unive
This past summer, a group from Johns Hopkins University traveled to Türkiye to help excavate a Late Bronze Age archive of cuneiform tablets at Alalakh/Tell Atchana. This team, funded by an ASOR Harris Grant, was uniquely qualified for the task, as they were trained in both archaeology and in reading Akkadian cuneiform. Read their grant report by clicking the link in our bio: https://www.asor.org/news/2025/12/harris-grant-report-alalakh
#Archaeology #Fieldwork #Cuneiform #Turkiye


Reminder: the deadline to propose new member-organ
Reminder: the deadline to propose new member-organized sessions and workshops for the 2026 Annual Meeting in Chicago is Thursday, January 15. Find more info and fill out a brief proposal here: https://buff.ly/Kqui65X


Don't miss the upcoming FOA webinar on Wednesday,
Don't miss the upcoming FOA webinar on Wednesday, January 21 at 7:00pm ET: "Experiencing Khirbet et-Tannur: The Story of a Nabatean Temple from the Second through 21st Century," presented by Dr. Sarah Wenner. In the 2nd century CE, after Rome annexed the Nabataean Kingdom and transformed it into the Roman province of Arabia, the Nabataean temple at Khirbet et-Tannur was constructed in Central Jordan. This lecture travels the site’s two millennia history and explores how Khirbet et-Tannur’s excavations, the collection at the Cincinnati Art Museum, and 21st century innovations have changed our understanding of the Nabataeans. Read more and register by clicking the link in our bio: https://www.asor.org/news/2026/01/webinar-wenner


Our #ObjectoftheWeek: An Egyptian “New Year’s Bott
Our #ObjectoftheWeek: An Egyptian “New Year’s Bottle”, a type of lentoid-shaped flask that was filled with perfumed oil or water from the Nile, gifted in connection to the New Year. ca. 664-525 BCE. MMA 30.8.214. Photo credit: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
#Archaeology #Egypt #NewYear


The archaeological record and the cuneiform litera
The archaeological record and the cuneiform literature provide us with compelling information to assess how children lived 3000 years ago. This should open our eyes to current realities, which are not so different. Read the newest ANE Today article, "Children in the Ancient (and Present-day) Near East", by clicking the link in our bio: https://anetoday.org/children-near-east/


In town for the #AIASCS2026 Annual Meeting? 🏺

Mak
In town for the #AIASCS2026 Annual Meeting? 🏺

Make sure to stop by the ASOR table in the Exhibit Hall to learn more about our programs and publications, and reconnect with colleagues and friends from across the field.

ASOR Exhibit Hall Hours:
• Wed, Jan 7 | 3:00–6:00 PM
• Thu–Fri, Jan 8–9 | 9:30 AM–5:30 PM
• Sat, Jan 10 | 8:00 AM–12:00 PM

We can’t wait to see you—come say hello! 

#ASOR #AIAAnnualMeeting #MeetUsThere


The 2026 ASOR Annual Meeting will begin on Wednesd
The 2026 ASOR Annual Meeting will begin on Wednesday, November 18, at 7:00pm CST with the plenary address by Dr. Kim Benzel: Lapis, Clay, Copper, Water: Presenting Ancient West Asian Art at The Met. Dr. Benzel is Curator in Charge of The Metropolitan Museum of Art. She holds a Ph.D. in Art History and Archaeology from Columbia University and has participated in archaeological excavations in Syria. Currently, Kim and her colleagues are working on a full rethink and renovation of The Met’s permanent galleries of Ancient West Asian Art, scheduled to reopen in June 2027. Read more about the 2026 Plenary Address here: https://www.asor.org/am/2026/plenary-address-2026


Make sure to tune in TOMORROW at 7:00 pm ET for th
Make sure to tune in TOMORROW at 7:00 pm ET for the next FOA webinar presented by Amanda Hope Haley: "Beyond Edutainment: Reclaiming Archaeology in a Clickbait World". If you haven't already signed up, click the link (https://buff.ly/cDQEBdk) in our bio to register for free.


ASOR plans to award two Mesopotamian Fellowships f
ASOR plans to award two Mesopotamian Fellowships for 2026-2027; one for $9,000 and one for $4,000. These fellowships are primarily intended to support fieldwork/research on ancient Mesopotamian culture carried out in the Middle East, but other projects such as travel to work on museum collections or archives related to ancient Mesopotamia will also be considered. The deadline for applications is January 26, 2026. More info can be found here: https://www.asor.org/fellowships/mesopotamian-fellowship/



Instagram

Stay updated with the latest insights, photos, and news by following us on Instagram!

Follow Us on Instagram

American Society of Overseas Research
The James F. Strange Center
209 Commerce Street
Alexandria, VA 22314

E-mail: info@asor.org

© 2025 ASOR
All rights reserved.
Images licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License

Contact Us
Membership
Give
Friends of ASOR
ASOR Cultural Heritage Initiatives
Terms of Use
News

Please follow & like us :)
Facebook
YouTube
LinkedIn