During the excavations of the 8,500 year-old Yeşilova Mound, known as the oldest settlement in İzmir’s Bornova district, important artifacts that provide information about life in the Neolithic Age have been unearthed.
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| Some of the artefacts recovered at the Yeşilova Mound [Credit: AA] |
Among the artifacts unearthed in the excavations, Derin said a five-centimeter-tall bear statuette dating back to 8,000 years ago was the most striking among them.
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| Five centimeter tall bear statuette, made from baked clay [Credit: AA] |
Sometimes they were tied to fear or sometimes they were tied to holiness. The small bear statuette that we found in the Yeşilova Mound is an example of them,” he said.
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| 5,000-year-old baby bottle that 'resembles a sparrow' [Credit: AA] |
“People might have used this pitcher to give water or milk to babies 5,000 years ago. Mothers tell their children ‘look, the bird is coming’ when feeding them. Maybe this expression comes from thousands of years ago,” said Derin.
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| 8,000-year-old house model [Credit: AA] |
“This small sculpture is a house from the Aegean region. It is like a sacred house. It was placed inside the home. People worshipped this sculpture, which depicts fruitfulness and fertility. An architect from this era made this sculpture experimentally and it has survived until now. Because the roof is not plain but slopes, it tells us it was made to protect the house from rains. It was built like the Greek temples in western Anatolia,” Derin said.
Derin also said they had removed a 10-12 centimeter-long front shearing tooth of a bear during the excavations in Yassıtepe. “We think these findings of a dead bear might have been used as jewelry as a symbol of power,” he said.
Source: Hurriyet Daily News [October 26, 2017]









