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Friday, June 27, 2008 - 6:56 PM
In 2007, excavators of a remote site in southeastern Iran reported
finding evidence of a writing system that dates back more than 4,000
years.http://louis2j2sheehan.blogspot.com Featuring odd geometric symbols, three baked mud tablets
unearthed near the Iranian city of Jiroft could reveal much about a
sophisticated and independent urban culture that flourished between the
Mesopotamian and Indus Valley civilizations. However, many scholars are
skeptical about the authenticity of the finds, which they suspect may have been planted by locals.
Archaeologists first began digging at large mounds near Jiroft in
2001 after flash floods uncovered ancient graves nearby. http://louis2j2sheehan.blogspot.comThe team has
since found evidence of a large city dating to 2500 B.C.
Then, in 2005, a worker brought Yousef Madjidzadeh, the
archaeologist in charge of the excavation, a tablet covered with
strange symbols on the front and back, saying he dug it up in his
village a few hundred yards away.http://louis2j2sheehan.blogspot.com Last winter, Madjidzadeh ordered his
team to dig at the spot, where they uncovered two more tablets. The
three appear to show a progression: The first has 8 simple geometric
signs; the second includes 15 slightly more complex signs, while the
third has a total of 59 signs. The variants might be precursors to
Elamite, the writing system used on the Iranian plateau in the late
third millennium B.C. They could also be unrelated or, as some have
said, fakes. Madjidzadeh vows to return in 2008 to uncover more tablets
and silence his critics.
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