Posted on Friday 30 April 2004 to Story So Far
Amazing, AMAZING stuff coming out of the ground in Eastern Iran at the moment.
One day in early spring, a peasant from Matoutabad village in Jiroft came across an old object when he was passing along the river. The object was floating on the surface of water, as a consequence of the change in the river's route. The man picked up the object and returned to the village to find out whether other villagers also agreed with what had occurred to his unconscious mind.The site has been described as "so densely packed with archaic layers that ancient artifacts are even likely to come by at one-meter depths". Very accessible, no doubt, to agricultural workers armed with picks and shovels.
The brilliance of joy was quite evident in the eyes of the villagers who had gathered in the village square to observe the ancient artifact. Given that shortage of rainfall had inflicted great damage on the village plantations for the past two years, the villagers had to tackle the ensuing poverty and unemployment. Nonetheless, now things might have been different and if their guess was correct, they would be lucky and they shouldn't miss such a rare opportunity. The story was revealed to the entire village in no time. The following day all villagers took their shovels and picks and moved towards the point where the ancient object was located. Their guess that an underground treasure should have been hiden under the earth was correct. Nonetheless, they could hardly imagine that their homeland - Jiroft - could be the archaeologists' "lost paradise"!
--- Mystery of Daqyanous Treasuries And Extinction Of Ancient Hills In Jiroft
All these discoveries suggest that there have been sophisticated government and economy with a booming trade some 5000 years ago, the archeologist credited with first throwing the spotlight on the area said.
"The discovery of inscriptions, a ziggurat, and many cultural remains in Jiroft thought to be contemporary with the Sumerian civilization in Mesopotamia as well as the independence of the Halilrud River civilization could shift the archaeological and civilization landscape in the Middle East," he concluded.
These remarkable discoveries have led Majidzadeh to go as far as to suggest that the Jiroft culture may even predate the ancient civilisation of Sumer and uses phrases like "the earliest Oriental
civilization". This is quite a statement because the Sumerian culture,
or rather its pre-literate precursors in Southern Iraq, is generally
considered to be the world's oldest civilization so this claim has understandably met
with some scepticism from other researchers in the
field. Even his collaborator, Holly Pittman of the University of
Pennsylvania has gently implied that Majidzadeh is a little bit prone to hyperbole on occasions:
At this stage no carbon-dating has been used on the artefacts found and so their ages have only been inferred from their archaeological context. It will take a little longer for them to be scientifically confirmed but, despite this, the discovery of the Jiroft culture is destined to dramatically revise our understanding of this seminal period in the history of civilisation."He's a typical archaeologist," she says with a smile and a shrug. "His site is the center of the universe."
Still, she adds, it is "a very exciting site."
"From now on, we must speak of before and after Jiroft," says Karl Lamberg-Karlovsky, a Harvard University archaeologist.