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Egypt unearths one of oldest Nile Delta villages

This handout picture provided by the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities on September 3, 2018 shows a new discovery site believed to be one of the oldest known villages on the Nile Delta. (Photo by AFP)

One of the oldest villages in the Nile Delta has been discovered after archeologists unearthed artifacts dating to the fifth millennium BC, the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities says.

Remains of the village were uncovered by a French-Egyptian team at Tel Samara in northeastern Egypt, the ministry said Sunday.

Similar structures dating to the period between 4,200 BC and 2,900 BC "have never been found in that region," said Ayman Ashmawy, the ministry's antiquities chief.

The only similar discovery has been the village of Sais, in the Gharbia governorate north of Cairo, Ashmawi added.

Excavations of Tel Samara in the Dakahlia governorate northeast of the capital uncovered a number of silos containing numerous animal bones and vegetable residue.

Archeologists, who had been working at the site since 2015, also found pottery and stone tools at the site, according to the ministry statement.

The discoveries "confirm the presence of stable communities in the humid areas of the Delta from the fifth millennium BC," said Frederic Geyau, head of the Tel Samara mission.

The findings have offered "a unique occasion to learn more about the prehistoric communities which lived in the Delta" before the Pharaonic rule, he added.

(Source: AFP)


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