
Morighat, Jordan – According to a report La Berjola Word, Archaeologists at the University of Copenhagen revealed a 5,000 -year -old ancient formal complex in the Jordanian city of Marighat, providing new information about an important transitional period in the region’s human history. It is unusual in this site that it has no evidence of stoves or permanent residences, but instead contains loneliness standing stones, open air public walls, and at least 95 megalithic tomb known as dolmence. This history is a period of the end of the copper era and the end of the beginning of the bronze era, in which large villages were abandoned, trade decreased, and disappeared in the temples. Researchers suggest that Mori Ghat served as a central location for these deep fluctuations affected communities. They may be together for formal invitations, respect the dead, and discuss the best process to deal with growing climate and social changes. Read the original scholarly article about this research Leont. To read about a shrine that hunters built 9,000 years ago in southeast Jordan, go to the “neolates hunting shrine”, one of ArchaeologyTop 10 discoveries of 2022.