JPost Holy Land is a new column that will bring you the latest archaeology news and stories from Israel in collaboration with the University of Haifa.
It all begun a few years ago, while walking back to the bus from a desolate archaeological site in the Negev. With a bunch of archaeology students trailing behind, two of us (Dani Nadel and Guy Bar-Oz) were talking about the age and function of the ancient "Desert Kites". It was during that morning that we decided to launch a new research project. We thus gathered several experts and built a multi-disciplinary research team; it included Uzi Avner (the Arava Institute and the Dead Sea-Arava Research Centre) who already excavated a couple of kites in the Negev, Dan Malkinson – a landscape ecologist (the Department of Geography), Naomi Porat (the Geological Institute) for OSL dating, Elisabetta Boaretto (the Weizmann Institute) for 14C dating and Sagi Filin (Technion) for 3D modeling. Within a few months we went out, camped in remote places and started to survey and excavate on behalf of the Zinman Institute of Archaeology at the University of Haifa."Desert Kites" is a nickname for ancient structures first discovered by RAF pilots who flew over the Near East during the 1920's. Over 4,000 kites are currently known between Yemen in the south and Armenia in the north, most of them only through Google Earth images. So far about 1% has been thoroughly surveyed, and less than 30 kites were ever excavated. Interestingly, the first to ever be excavated in modern times was a kite by Kibbutz Samar, followed by excavations near Eilat and in Sinai.