ABU DHABI - An important discovery of archaeological finds from the Palaeolithic Period in Abu Dhabi was announced by Mohamed Khalaf Al-Mazrouei, Director General of Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage.
The finds were identified by a team from the Authority and two visiting scholars.
The discovery included stone artefacts of Levallois technique, an industry that was known during the Old Stone Age.
Due to the importance of this discovery, the Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage is participating in the Seminar for Arabian Studies, to be held at the British Museum between the 19th and 20th of this month where the discovery will be discussed with international scholars. Several papers dealing with the Palaeolithic of Arabia will be presented at the seminar.
Dr. Walid Yasin, Manager of the Archaeology Division at ADACH picked up the first distinctive artefact from one of the ancient sites in the Western Province of Abu Dhabi.
He reported that a number of flint cores and flakes of Levallois technique were collected from the site. Artefacts of this manufacturing technique were first discovered in the nineteenth century at the archaeological site of Levallios, near Paris.
Today, similar artefacts are known from Europe, Africa and Asia. In the Near East they are usually associated with Neanderthal man.
The dating of Abu Dhabi artefacts according to Dr. Ghanim Wahida, a pre-historian, specialized in this period from Cambridge University, UK, is however estimated to fall in the Middle Palaeolithic (150000-35000 years ago).
The significance of this major discovery “lies in the fact that it alters our understanding of the beginning of first human activities in Abu Dhabi which seem to go back to the Old Stone Age, as opposed to the New Stone Age some 7500 years ago”, said Yasin.
It should be also noted that the Western Province of the Emirate of Abu Dhabi revealed fossils of mammals from the Late Miocene date (6-8 million years ago), together with evidence of an ancient river, which indicate prevailing a wet climate.