A new study titled “Tel Dor in the Middle Bronze Age and Maritime Adaptation along the Carmel Coast” was recently published in BASOR by Assaf Yasur-Landau, Chandler Houghtalin, Marko Runjajić, Zachary Dunseth, and Ruth Shahack-Gross.
A newly excavated, well-built, Middle Bronze (MB) II–III coastal structure at Tel Dor provides a fresh glimpse into the turbulent settlement history of the Carmel Coast in the first half of the 2nd millennium B.C.E. The structure, incorporating a massive ashlar orthostat, was built in the MB I–II transition or MB II and existed for more than a century before its collapse during the MB III. A tight cluster of radiocarbon data indicates its destruction ca. 1600–1550B.C.E.Asthefirst Middle Bronze Age structure extensively excavated at Dor, it fills a lacuna in the site’s history. Other Middle Bronze Agefindsenable a reconstruction of Dor’s anchorages and create a narrative of settlement patterns on the CarmelCoast, tightly connected with contemporary maritime activities, and reflecting a resilient settlement system devoid of urban centers.
Read the full paper here.