1,500-year-old farming and carpentry tools found in Northwest Turkey
Archaeologists have found 1,500-year-old agricultural and carpentry tools in the ancient Greek city of Alexandria Troas in the northwestern province of Çanakkale (Greek Dardanellia).
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| Credit: Çanakkale Culture and Tourism |
Öztepe said it is the most interesting finding of 2018.
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| Credit: Çanakkale Culture and Tourism |
The objects include sickles, soil scrapers, weed cutters, soil tampers, plows, long nails, and hand tools like saws, grinders, drills and spatula scrapers.
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| Credit: Çanakkale Culture and Tourism |
“The large storage containers, known as pithos, which were used to contain dry legumes in the Aegean region until the recent past, were also used as graves. But rarely, as it is seen in this year’s excavations, they were used to keep other objects like agricultural tools,” he added.
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| Credit: Çanakkale Culture and Tourism |
Although its importance gradually faded under the Byzantine Empire, it was significant enough to remain the see of a bishopric until its abandonment some time in the Middle Ages.
Source: Hurriyet Daily News [October 16, 2018]







Fascinating. I'd like to compare the carpentry tools to those the Mastermyr find, 500 years later and half a continent away.
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