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Stone age water well discovered in Paphos.
ARCHAEOLOGISTS have found what they believe are some of the world's oldest water wells, dating from the Stone Age 10,500 years ago and containing the skeleton of a young woman.
The wells, unearthed by an excavator at a building site close to Paphos, adds to another five previously excavated in the region by a team from the University of Edinburgh.
"Radiocarbon dates indicate that these wells are 9,000 to 10,500 years old, which places them amongst the earliest water wells known in the world," the Antiquities Department said in a statement yesterday.
The cylindrical shaft discovered by the excavator had a number of snall niches cut out of its sides to enable those who dug the well to climb in and out. It was silted up, containing animal bones and the poorly preserved skeleton of a young woman, the department said.
"Unfortunately we shall never know how she came to be there," it said.
At the bottom of the shaft there were several small natural channels in the bedrock through which water would have flowed, confirming that this was a water well. Water would presumably have been extracted by some sort of bucket, possibly made of leather, tied on a rope.
Near the bottom of the well, an intact small, crude bowl was found as well as a dish of much finer quality that had clearly smashed when it fell, or was thrown in. Both were carved on chalk, and were perhaps vessels that had been around the well-head.
Source: Cyprus Mail.


