Archaeologists discover 4,000-year-old Bronze Age settlement hidden in Saudi Arabian oasis

Archaeologists discover 4,000-year-old Bronze Age settlement hidden in Saudi Arabian oasis

A small 4,400-year-old town in the Khaybar Oasis of Saudi Arabia hints that Bronze Age people in this region were slow to urbanize, unlike their contemporaries in Egypt and Mesopotamia, a new study finds.

Archaeologists discovered the site near the city of Al-‘Ula in the Hejaz region of western Saudi Arabia and called it “al-Natah.” The settlement covered about 3.7 acres (1.5 hectares), “including a central district and nearby residential district surrounded by protective ramparts,” the researchers said in a statement. But the town, which was occupied starting around 2400 B.C., was small, with a population of only around 500 people, the team noted in a study, published Wednesday (Oct. 30) in the journal PLOS One.

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