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Thursday, July 17, 2025

Flippant Evidence In Jerusalem's Rock-Cut-Rooms


Recently a paper published in conjunction with Weizmann Institute and Israel Antiquities Authority uncharacteristically stated: “Thus, several seeds from an ash layer found below a thin wall in Area U (Room 19040), indicate a 9th century BC date for the construction of this room and adjacent structures, as well as the hewing of a series of rock-cut rooms to which the architectural remains were connected based on stratigraphic observations (SI Appendix, Figs. S18 and S20). Also dating to this century in Area U was a collapsed refuse of building materials, uncovered in Room 17063, built directly on top of the bedrock (RTD 9180, Fig. 2 and SI Appendix, Figs. S4, S9, and S12).”

After Joe Uziel discovered the Iron Age fragments on the north eastern wall of the Spring Tower, he has carefully and consistently argued that Iron Age findings in stratigraphic layers bias the entire area, including Area U. Now he chose this opportunity to boldly, almost flippantly state "as well as the hewing of a series of rock-cut rooms" inferring that the rock-cut-rooms should also assume this Iron Age date. Not so fast Joe, here I present the most pertinent facts related to the strata and dating of the rock-cut-rooms, which you seem to ignore. 

With this information you can consider whether rock-cut-rooms should be dated to the Iron Age or the Middle Bronze Age? I will only present the most relevant, critical, carbon dated samples, that were found closest to bedrock. 


Click to enlarge color coded image 

Sample RTD 9180 was found in a small pit (south) in a room and RTD 9181 on the northern end in a 5 cm ash layer just above the upper bedrock surface of Area-U, the ridge west of the rock-cut-rooms (in the pink rectangle). RTD 10293 and RTD 9965, were also found in Area U, but importantly these were located below the level of the upper bedrock surface, in soft soil, under a man-made plaster layer in a water channel that ran into rock-cut-rooms 1 and 5. RTD 10191, the oldest Middle Bronze sample, was found under leveling rocks that were used to stabilize the wall of Room 1948. RTD 11362, furthest to the north, was found in a 5 cm ash layer and is the oldest of the Iron Age samples found in that excavation.

Anecdotally notice the Iron Age samples dated RTD 9180 and RTD 11362 are found on the north-south boundary adjacent to the functional rock-cut-rooms, whereas Middle Bronze samples RTD 10293, RTD 9965, RTD 9181 and RTD 10191 are aligned east-west to the functional, bedrock layers of the rock-cut-rooms.

For this purpose, there is little point paying attention to stratigraphic layers above these samples because they reflect the earliest possible dates the rock-cut-rooms were used, which is the fact that must still be established. I'm appealing to Joe to clarify these important, perhaps critical points because these rock-cut-rooms are extremely sensitive and these low lying stratigraphic samples potentially align with Israel's forefathers or even earlier Biblical figures and it deserve to be treated accordingly.