........

Marawah

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Location of Marawah (Source: ADIAS)
Location of Marawah (Source: ADIAS)

Introduction
Survey
Excavation
Excavations at MR11
Images
Links
Press
Publications


Introduction

The island of Merawah lies around 100 kilometres to the west of the city of Abu Dhabi, and is located just to the north of the Khor al Bazm. To the west is the small island of Al Fiyah, to the southeast the island of Junaina, and to the east the island of Abu al Abyad. It is around 15 km north of the main coastline and about eight km north west of Junaina. Marawah is around 13 kilometres from east–west and a maximum of 5.5 kilometres north–south. The structure of the island is formed from relict Pleistocene limestone platforms linked by Holocene (recent) sand and beach deposits and intervening patches of sabkha (salt flats) (Evans et al. 2002).

Mapping of archaeological sites on Marawah - 1st ADIAS season, 1992 (Source: ADIAS)
Mapping of archaeological sites on Marawah - 1st ADIAS season, 1992 (Source: ADIAS)


ADIAS carried out a preliminary survey of the archeological sites on the island in 1992 (King 1998). This identified a total of 13 major sites ranging in date from the Late Stone Age to Late Islamic period. A summary of the sites is provided as follows:

SITE CODE DESCRIPTION WEBSITE LINK
MR1 Neolithic (Late Stone Age) site on a low rocky coastal promontory at the SW end of Marawah. This site dates to the Late 6th millennium BC. To see some of the projectile points collected from the surface of this site click here.
MR2 Series of mostly Islamic period sites on east/west limestone ridges just to the north and east of Ghubba.
MR3 Series of Late Islamic period shell middens, mostly pearl oyster, to north and SE of Marawah village.
MR4 Ghubba village, which includes 14 Late Islamic period shell middens near the shore and an interesting group of traditional buildings (a wooden courtyard house MR4.8, a wooden mosque MR4.9, a boat house MR4.10, and a wooden building used to store fishing nets MR4.11).
MR5 Late Islamic period mosque less than 1km east of the village of Liffa. Built of beach-rock.
MR6 Group of four cairns on west coast of Marawah.
MR7 Islamic period cemetery with ca 40 burials. Collapsed cairn and stone circle nearby.
MR8 Six ?Late Islamic period wells located about 1km west of the village of Ghubba.
MR9 Group of 160 hearths located SW of the village of Ghubba. These appear to be of various dates. Radiocarbon dates indicate 1=Bronze age, 3= Iron age and 1=Sasanian.
MR10 Late Islamic period midden on the NW of Marawah on a small promontory north of Liffiya.
MR11 A group of seven mounds located SW of Ghubba on the NW tip of a limestone ridge. Originally believed to be of Pre-Islamic date, it is now known from recent excavations and radiocarbon dating that the site dates to the mid 6th millennium BC.
To see some pictures of the recent excavations at the site click here
MR12 A group of seven ?Pre-Islamic period cairns in a line along a ridge running south of MR11.
MR13 Islamic period graveyard with about 100 burials to the north of Ghubba village.



Survey

More recent surveys during the late 1990's and since 2000 have added more sites to this total. Most of the survey work in the 1990's was carried out by Salvatore Garfi and Jakub Czastka.

The most recent survey of the island was carried out during April 2002 by Dr Mark Beech, ADIAS Senior Resident Archaeologist, and Ingrid Barcelo, a former ADIAS employee, who now works for the the Terrestrial Environment Research Centre (TERC) in the Environmental Research and Wildlife Development Agency (ERWDA) in Abu Dhabi. This survey checked the GPS co-ordinates of all the known archaeological sites on the island for the ADIAS sites database.


Mapping of archaeological sites on Marawah - April 2002 (Source: ADIAS)
Mapping of archaeological sites on Marawah - April 2002 (Source: ADIAS)


Excavation

A number of archaeological excavations have been carried out on Marawah. These are listed as follows:

1994
MR1 - late 6th/early 5th mill BC settlement, small evaluation trench, Jakub Czastka.

1994
MR4 - Hexaplex kuesterianus midden in Ghubba village, Jakub Czastka and Alex Wasse.

1997 (11 March - 7 April)
MR6.3 - Burial cairn with the remains of an articulated human burial, excavated by Jodie Benton, Soren Blau and Nadia Iacono.

1998 (4 - 27 March)
MR6.2 - remains of a lime burning hearth.

MR6.4 - remains of a circular stone feature approximately 1.90cm in diameter and 90cm high. The feature contained a small ceramic vessel and weathered fragments of a human cranium.

MR12.1 - One of eleven stone cairns located along a limestone ridge c.200m southwest of the town of Ghubba. The cairn was exposed as a low, oval shaped structure approximately 55cm high and 2m in diameter. Inside the cairn highly fragmented remains of two human inhumations were encountered. The remains are incomplete and in very poor condition.

1999 (2 - 31 March)
MR6 - pair of Late Pre-Islamic lime kilns, excavated by Nadia Iacono and Graham Wilson.

2003
MR11 - two sondages were excavated by Dr Joseph Elders and John Martin in two of the mounds at MR11. Whilst Dr Elders excavated in area A, on the low mound with traces of a building, originally believed to be a church, John Martin excavated some 200 metres or so to the NW in Area B, where there were traces of further stone buildings.

2004
MR11 - Dr Mark Beech directed excavations at this important Neolithic settlement located in the SW part of Marawah. Further details are provided below.


Excavations at MR11

In early April 2004 ADIAS completed its second season of excavations at MR11, located in the south-western corner of the island. Excavations were directed by ADIAS Senior Resident Archaeologist, Dr Mark Beech, and the team included: Richard Cuttler and Derek Moscrop (Birmingham Archaeology, UK), Dr Heiko Kallweit (Freiburg, Germany), and John Martin (Carlisle, UK).

The site, formerly believed to be a "church", has in fact turned out to be one of the best preserved examples of a neolithic house ever excavated in the United Arab Emirates(!). Radiocarbon dates confirm that the site dates back to the mid 6th millennium BC
.

For more information about the recent work at site MR11:

Read the
ADIAS May 2004 Newsletter

Visit the
site MR11 web page.

Read the following news articles:

A
non. 2004. Houses dating to 5000 BC discovered in UAE. Current World Archaeology magazine, no.3 (issued January 2004). [ to download this article in Acrobat .pdf format click here (433 Kb) ] .


Anon. 2004. Abu Dhabi Discovery (Source: Archaeology - A Publication of the Archaeological Institute of America - Newsbriefs - Volume 57 Number 5, September/October 2004)



Images


7000 year-old house at site MR11 on Marawah island

7000 year-old house at site MR11 on Marawah island
7000 year-old flint spear and arrowhead from site MR11 on Marawah island
The results of the two radiocarbon dates from site MR11 on Marawah island


7000 year old house discovered at site MR11 on Marawah island (Photograph: ADIAS).
 

7000 year old pottery vessel discovered at site MR11 on Marawah island (Photograph: ADIAS).


The earliest inhabitant of Abu Dhabi - The human skeleton was placed on a stone platform at the southern end of the room (Photograph: ADIAS).
 


The earliest inhabitant of Abu Dhabi - Close-up detail of the human skeleton (Photograph: ADIAS).


7000 year old buttons made from pearl oyster (Photograph: ADIAS).
 

Photograph of arrowheads from site MR1

View a 7000 year old Late Stone Age flint arrowhead (Quicktime required) from site MR1 on Marawah island (via the external website, the Virtual Museum on the http://www.uaeinteract.com/ website, produced by Trident Press).

Visit a further Gallery of pictures from Marawah



Links

Ashraf Saad Al Cibahy, Manager Profile (Source: MPA News)

Mangrove on Marawah (Source: Arabian WIldlife)

Marawah - Marawah archaeology (Source: Uaeinteract.com)

Marawah Marine Protected Area (Source: ERWDA)

Pictures from the 2004 excavation season at MR11 (Source: ADIAS website)

Radiocarbon dates from Marawah (Source: ADIAS website)



Press

12 March 1998
New excavations begin on Marawah (Source:  www.uaeinteract.com
)

21 May 1998
New book on archaeology of three Abu Dhabi islands (Source:  www.uaeinteract.com
)

2 May 2000
4,000 year old fireplaces on Abu Dhabi's islands
(Source: www.uaeinteract.com)


13 August 2001
History Comes Home - With Help from Emirates (ADIAS press release)


11 June 2003
ADIAS completes mapping Abu Dhabi treasure island (Source: Gulf News)


7000 year old houses on Marawah (in arabic) (Source: Al Ittihad)
(download jpeg version)



7000 year old houses on Marawah (in arabic) (Source: Al Khaleej)

7000 year old houses on Marawah (in arabic) (Source: Al Wahda)

6 January 2004
Stone Age homes found in the Gulf
(Source: News.Scotsman.com)

Stone Age homes found in the Gulf (Source: Irish Examiner)

Stone Age homes found in the Gulf (Source: Ireland On-line)

Remains of Late Stone Age houses found on Emirates island - by Rawya Rageh - Associated Press Writer, 364 words, 17:21, Associated Press Newswires, English, (c) 2004. The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP)

Archaeologists have discovered the remains of Stone Age houses going back 7,000 years on an island off the coast of the United Arab Emirates, an expert said Tuesday. The foundations of three dwellings were found on Marawah island, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) west of the UAE capital, Abu Dhabi, about nine months ago. The site also yielded a flint spearhead about 9 centimeters (3 inches) long, a flint arrowhead and a grinding stick, said Mark Beech, the senior resident archaeologist of the Abu Dhabi Islands Archaeological Survey. Beech said the team suspected there were more house remains to be found. "These structures are amazing in terms of historic importance. They are the best and most complete structures found in the whole (Gulf) region," Beech said. Less well-preserved remains of houses have been found in Kuwait and Qatar. Samples examined at Britain's University of Glasgow showed the houses date to 6,5000-7,000 years ago, which is about 2,000 years before the earliest Pharaoh in Egypt. "People have settled in that area and were carrying out domestic activities," Beech said. Other sites at Marawah island have produced pieces of Ubaid pottery. As this was produced in southern Mesopotamia, today's Iraq, it shows that Marawah's settlers were involved in maritime trade. The houses belong to what is called the Arabian Neolithic Era, which corresponds to the Late Stone Age. They have walls that are half a meter thick and built of local stone. They are rectangular and oval in shape, Beech said. "We have found sites from different periods (on Marawah), starting from the Late Stone Age until the pre-oil era," including sites belonging to the Bronze Age (3,150-1,200 BC), the Iron Age (1,200-586) and the Islamic period (7th-18th century), Beech said. He said the archaeologists will excavate further on the island beginning in March. Marawah is about 13 kilometers (8 miles) from east to west, and nearly 5.5 kilometers (3 miles) from north to south.

7 January 2004
7,000-year-old housing units found in Marawah Island (Source: Archeonet Archeologisch Nieuws - Dutch website)

7,000-year-old houses found in the Gulf (Source: Stone Pages)

Boffins' 7000-year-old find (Source: Glasgow Evening Times Online)

Stone Age settlement found on Gulf island (Source: The Scotsman)

8 January 2004
Glasgow newspaper reports Abu Dhabi archaeological finds (Source: WAM)

11 January 2004
Audio News from The Archaeology Channel / Archaeologica: Week of 5 - 11 January 2004
This features the news story "Ancient Dwellings Discovered in United Arab Emirates"
N.B. this is an audio file. Click on your choice of media player and download speed:
Windows Media 56k version - Windows Media 300k version
Real Player 56k version - Real Player 300k version
For other archaeology news in audio click here.

29 June 2004
Marawah excavations find Abu Dhabi's oldest inhabitant
(Source:
Emirates News Agency - WAM)

30 June 2004
Earliest inhabitant of Abu Dhabi discovered - for the full story click here [download jpeg version] (Source: Al Ittihad)



First inhabitant of Abu Dhabi discovered on Marawah island (Source: Al Bayan)


Abu Dhabi's first inhabitant discovered on Marawah island (Source: Al Khaleej)


Excavations unearth oldest inhabitant of Abu Dhabi [download jpeg version] (Source:
Gulf News)

Marawah excavations find Abu Dhabi's oldest inhabitant (Source:
Gulf Today)

Remains of oldest inhabitant of Abu Dhabi found [download jpeg version] (Source:
Khaleej Times)

Marawah excavations find Abu Dhabi's oldest inhabitant (Source:
Uaeinteract.com)

A look into the past (Source:
Uaeinteract.com)

Ältester Bewohner Abu Dhabis in 7000 Jahre alter Siedlung entdeckt (Source: Web.de - Wissenschaft - Archäologie)

18 November 2004
News story about the discovery of the 7500 year old skeleton on Marawah island (Source: Asharq Al-Awsat - a pan-Arab newspaper based in London)

20 December 2004

Local Press coverage:
Remains of 7,500-year-old man found (Source: Khaleej Times)

International Press coverage:
7500-year-old body unearthed (Source: Advertiser, Australia)

7500-year-old body unearthed
(Source: The Australian, Australia)

7500-year-old body unearthed (Source: Brisbane Courier Mail, Australia)

Remains of 7,500-yr old man found in UAE (Source: The Daily Star, Bangladesh)

7500-year-old body unearthed (Source: Daily Telegraph, Australia)

Remains of 7,500-Year-Old Man Found in UAE (Source: Free Internet Press, NY)

Remains of 7,500-Year-Old Man Found in UAE (Source: India Daily, India)

7500-year-old body unearthed (Source: Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia)

7500-year-old body unearthed (Source: The Mercury, Australia)

7500-year-old body unearthed (Source: NEWS.com.au, Australia)

Remains of 7,500-Year-Old Man Found in UAE (Source: Reuters, UK)

Remains of 7,500-Year-Old Man Found in UAE (Source: Reuters, NY)

7500-year-old body unearthed (Source: South Australia Advertiser, Australia)

7500-Year-Old Man Found (Source: Tiscali News, UK)

Remains of 7,500-Year-Old Man Found in UAE
(Source: Yahoo News)




Seated from left to right at the end of the table: Dr Saeid M.E.Shawgi (Head of Forensic Pathology Unit, General Directorate of Abu Dhabi Police), Dr Mark Beech (Senior Resident Archaeologist, Abu Dhabi Islands Archaeological Survey, ADIAS), Lt. Col. Ahmad Hassan Al-Awadhi (Director of the Forensic Science Laboratory, General Directorate of Abu Dhabi Police), Peter Hellyer (Executive Director, Abu Dhabi Islands Archaeological Survey, ADIAS)


ADIAS held a press conference together with the Forensic Science Laboratory at Abu Dhabi Police Headquarters in Abu Dhabi from 10-11.30 a.m. The following press release was issued:

Forensic Science Laboratory of Abu Dhabi Police identifies the gender (Source: WAM, Emirates Press Agency)


7500 year old house discovered at site MR11 on Marawah island (Photograph: ADIAS).
 

ca 7000 year old pottery vessel discovered at site MR11 on Marawah island (Photograph: ADIAS).


The earliest inhabitant of Abu Dhabi - The human skeleton was placed on a stone platform at the southern end of the room (Photograph: ADIAS).
 


The earliest inhabitant of Abu Dhabi - Close-up detail of the human skeleton (Photograph: ADIAS).


21 December 2004

Local Press coverage:




UAE's oldest skeleton found
- in arabic (Source: Al Bayan)







Scientist's recover DNA from skeleton
- in arabic (Source: Al Ittihad)



(Source: Al Khaleej)


(Source: Al Watan)

Gender of oldest man identified - also download jpeg version (Source: Gulf Today)

Scientists recover DNA from skeleton - also download jpeg version (Source: Khaleej Times)

UAE's oldest skeleton found - also download jpeg version (Source: Gulf News)

Forensic Science Laboratory of Abu Dhabi Police identifies the gender (Source: UAEinteract.com)

International Press coverage:


Remains of 7,500-year-old man found in UAE (Source: ABC Online, Australia)

Archaeologists find 'first man in UAE' (Source: CNN, GA, USA)

Archaeologists find 'first man in UAE' (Source: CNN International, GA, USA)

Hallan restos hombre de 7 500 años en Emiratos Arabes Unidos (Source: Granma Internacional Digital, Cuba)

7,500-year-old man’s remains found in UAE (Source: Gulf Times, Qatar)

UAE archaeologists find 7,500-yr-old skeleton (Source: Hindustan Times, India)

Remains of 7,500-year-old man 'found in UAE' (Source: New Zealand Herald, New Zealand)

UAE uncovers 7500-year-old man's skeleton (Source: People's Daily Online, China)

7,500-year-old skeleton found (Source: The Scotsman, UK)

7,500-year-old remains of man found in Abu Dhabi (Source: The Times of Oman)

7,500-Year-Old Human Remains Found (Source: Xtra News, New Zealand)

22 December 2004
Remains of 7,500-year-old man found in UAE (Source: StonePages.com - Archaeo News)

Sedem tisoc let star Arabec (Source: Svarog.org, Slovenia)

23 December 2004
7,500-year-old man's remains found (Source: Star of Mysore, India).

25 December 2004
Scientists recover DNA from skeleton in Abu Dhabi (Source: Abu Dhabi Police website)

16 January 2005
New evidence of ancient boat mooring sites
[ download jpeg version] (Source: Khaleej Times)

New evidence of ancient boat mooring sites (Source: UAEinteract.com)


3 February 2005
Finds offer valuable info on Neolithic (Source: Arab Times)

Ancient human skeletons, pots found in Abu Dhabi islands (Source: Kuwait Times)

8 February 2005
Excavation unearths oldest archaeological site in UAE (also download jpeg version) (Source: Khaleej Times)

Excavation unearths oldest archaeological site in UAE (Source: Iranian Cultural Heritage News Agency, CHN)


9 February 2005
Excavation unearths oldest archaeological site in UAE (Source: UAEinteract.com)

10 April 2005
Dugongs and sea turtles in the UAE 'under threat' (Source: Khaleej Times)

1 May 2005
Marawah Island - The UAE's First Civilisation (Source: Al Shindagha no.64, May-June 2005)


Publications

Anon. 2004. Houses dating to 5000 BC discovered in UAE. Current World Archaeology magazine, no.3 (issued January 2004).
[ to download this article in Acrobat .pdf format click here (433 Kb) ] .

Anon. 2004.
Abu Dhabi Discovery (Source: Archaeology - A Publication of the Archaeological Institute of America - Newsbriefs - Volume 57 Number 5, September/October 2004)

Beech, M. 2003. The diet of Osprey Pandion haliaetus on Marawah island, Abu Dhabi emirate, UAE.
Tribulus (Journal of the Emirates Natural History Group) 13.1: 22-25.
[ to download this article in Acrobat .pdf format click here (330 Kb) ] .

Beech M., R. Cuttler, D. Moscrop, H. Kallweit & J. Martin. 2005. New evidence for the Neolithic settlement of Marawah Island, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 35: 37-56.
[ to download this article in Acrobat .pdf format click here (2.57 MB) ] .

Beech, M. and N. Al Shaiba. 2004. Intertidal Archaeology on Marawah Island: New Evidence for Ancient Boat Mooring Sites. Tribulus (Journal of the Emirates Natural History Group) 14.2: 8-16.
[ to download this article in Acrobat .pdf format click here (362 Kb) ] .

Evans, G., A. Kirkham and R.A. Carter. 2002. Quaternary Development of the United Arab Emirates Coast: New Evidence from Marawah Island, Abu Dhabi. GeoArabia 7(3): 441-458.
[ to download this article in Acrobat .pdf format click here (1.1 MB) ] .

Garfi, S. 1998. A Late Islamic site on Merawah. Tribulus (Journal of the Emirates Natural History Group) 8.1: 31.
[ to download this article in Acrobat .pdf format click here (129 Kb) ]
.

Hellyer, P. (ed). 1990. The Natural History of Merawah Island. with contributions by T.D. Adams, J.N.B. Brown, P. Hellyer and E.A. and M. Pitts. Bulletin of the Emirates Natural History Group 42: 2-20.

Hellyer, P.  1993a. Neolithic flints from Merawah. Tribulus (Journal of the Emirates Natural History Group) 3.1: 20.
[ to download this article in Acrobat .pdf format click here (1.59 MB) ]
.

King, G.R.D.  1998.  Abu Dhabi Islands Archaeological Survey: Season I - An Archaeological Survey of Sir Bani Yas, Dalma and Marawah: Season One. Trident Press: London.
[ To purchase this book (ISBN 1-900724-14-6) visit Trident Press ]

Forthcoming

Beech, M., R. Cuttler, D. Moscrop, H. Kallweit and J. Martin. in prep. New evidence for the Neolithic settlement of Marawah island, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates. In: P. Hellyer and M. Ziolkowski (eds.). 2nd Annual Symposium on Recent Archaeological Work in the Emirates. Zayed Centre for Heritage and History.


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