2017
DOI: 10.1017/irq.2017.2
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EXCAVATIONS AT KURD QABURSTAN, A SECOND MILLENNIUMb.c. URBAN SITE ON THE ERBIL PLAIN

Abstract: Excavations at the 109 hectare site of Kurd Qaburstan on the Erbil plain in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq were conducted by the Johns Hopkins University in 2013 and 2014. The Middle Bronze Age (Old Babylonian period) is the main period of occupation evident on the site, and the project therefore aims to study the character of a north Mesopotamian urban centre of the early second millennium b.c. On the high mound, excavations revealed three phases of Mittani (Late Bronze) period occupation, including evidence of… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…In general, the Kurd Qaburstan MB assemblage seems relatively uniform, without conspicuous differences between phases or between excavation areas. Since there are many parallels between the assemblage and pottery from Mari and Leilan in the era of Shamshi-Adad and Zimrilim (see Schwartz et al 2017 and notes here), a date in the middle MB seems likely.…”
Section: Pottery and Chronologymentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…In general, the Kurd Qaburstan MB assemblage seems relatively uniform, without conspicuous differences between phases or between excavation areas. Since there are many parallels between the assemblage and pottery from Mari and Leilan in the era of Shamshi-Adad and Zimrilim (see Schwartz et al 2017 and notes here), a date in the middle MB seems likely.…”
Section: Pottery and Chronologymentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In 2017, the geophysics team continued magnetometer survey on the lower town of Kurd Qaburstan to investigate the urban structure, to learn how the city grew, and to identify possible evidence for destruction such as burning. 4 Most of the evidence dates to the Middle Bronze Age, since the majority of the latest occupation on the lower town belongs to that era (Schwartz et al 2017). We surveyed 17 hectares with a Bartington Grad 601-2 Magnetic Gradiometer, bringing our total coverage to 51 ha of the 95-ha city.…”
Section: Geophysical Surveymentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Ground-based geophysics, especially magnetic gradiometry (magnetometry), is a popular and effective tool for documenting a wide range of subsurface archaeological features, and has been used widely at sites in Europe (e.g., [62]), North America (e.g., [63,64]), and Southwest Asia (e.g., [65][66][67][68][69]). Although Kvamme [70] has long advocated for the use of terrestrial geophysics as a means of "landscape archaeology," i.e., exploring off-site areas, it has rarely been employed in this manner.…”
Section: Magnetic Gradiometrymentioning
confidence: 99%