The Chalcolithic period is divided into three primary stages, called the Early Chalcolithic, Middle Chalcolithic and Late Chalcolithic, each identified with a different
material culture. The chronology of the period was refined by the Israeli prehistorian
Yosef Garfinkel.
Early Chalcolithic (5,800–5,300 BC) The identification of the Early Chalcolithic emerged alongside the first excavations at
Jericho (1935–1936), where
John Garstang initially classified Layer VIII for a time as Chalcolithic. Subsequent definitions were refined based on ceramic assemblages, especially those from
Wadi Rabah and
Munhata Layer 2b, excavated by J. Kaplan and J. Perrot. At Munhata, a large exposure (47,320 sherds) revealed a standardized repertoire of 21 pottery types, dominated by carinated bowls, holemouth jars with square rims,
pithoi with thumb-ledge handles, and bow-rim jars. Decoration was mainly by red or black slip, often
burnished (86.4%), with a smaller component of surface manipulation (13.5%); handles were rare and applied rope decoration absent. Comparable assemblages were identified at Jericho (Layer VIII and PNB), Wadi Rabah,
Teluliyot Batash III, ‘
Ein el-Jarba, and
Nahal Bezet, while most forms show clear parallels in Halafian sites such as Tel Halaf, Shams ed-Din, and Tell Turlu. Lithic industries also shift dramatically: the small Neolithic
arrowheads disappear from
Mediterranean-climatic zones, persisting only in
desert areas, while new
sickle blades and
adzes become common. At Nahal Zehora I, only the transversal arrowhead remains,
bifacial axes decline to about 3%, and adzes increase significantly.
Obsidian artifacts appear widely and indicate a peak in long-distance exchange networks. In contrast,
figurative art declines sharply compared to
Yarmukian culture; the few anthropomorphic figurines are schematic and emphasize female sexual features. New elements, such as elongated
slingstones, also emerge and have parallels in Halafian assemblages. Evidence from sites like
Hagoshrim further points to strong northern connections, including abundant obsidian and stamped seals. The Early Chalcolithic represents a rapid and far-reaching transformation in the material culture of the south- and central- Levant. The ceramic repertoire is largely new and closely tied to Halafian traditions of northern Syria, suggesting processes of cultural transmission rather than local development. This phase is also marked by a high degree of regional homogeneity, observable across former
Yarmukian and Jericho IX zones as well as in the broader Levant, including the Beq'a,
Byblos (“néolithique moyen”), and the ‘Amuq Phase C. File:Early Chalcolithic Munhata pottery.jpg|Early Chalcolithic pottery from Munhata File:Early Chalcolithic pottery from Hazireah.jpg|Early Chalcolithic pottery from Hazireah File:Early Chalcolithic figurine from Beisamun.jpg|Early Chalcolithic figurine from
Beisamun File:Early Chalcolithic seal from Hagoshrim.jpg|Early Chalcolithic seal from Hagoshrim File:Early Chalcolithic sling stone from Jericho.jpg|Early Chalcolithic sling stone from Jericho
Middle Chalcolithic (5,300–4,500 BC) Following the analysis of the Munhata assemblage, several late sites previously classified as Wadi Rabah cultural variants where were redefined as a separate stage distinct from Early Chalcolithic horizon. Middle Chalcolithic pottery is generally simple and standardized, characterized by a limited range of forms, including deep V-shaped bowls, holemouth jars with flat strap handles, jars with short everted necks, and “swollen-neck” jars. Handles are typically flat strap or pierced types. Middle Chalcolithic vessels are usually treated with simple red paint or red slip, occasionally accompanied by applied rope decoration. The material culture of the Middle Chalcolithic, identified at numerous sites, falls into two regional ceramic traditions. • The northern tradition, known as
Beth Shean XVIII Ware (also termed Tsafian Ware), is named after its identification at
Tel Beth Shean. Beth Shean XVIII Ware has been documented at Stratum Ib at
Tel ‘Ali, and lower strata at
Tell esh-Shunah, Tell Abu Habil, Tell es-Sa‘idiyeh et-Tahta, Tel Tsaf, and
Tuleilat el-Ghassul. • The southern trditions is referred to as
Qatifian Ware, called after the type-site of
Tel Qatif in the
Gaza Strip. Qatifian Ware is attested at sites such as Herzliya, Qatif,
Nahal Besor, and Tell
Wadi Feinan. Middle Chalcolithic sites material culture include stone-lined silos, plano-convex
mudbricks, basalt chalices, built cist
tombs, and the use of
jars for infant burials, as documented at sites such as
Tel Dan, Qatif,
Tel Te’o, and
Kabri.
Late Chalcolithic (4,500–3,700 BC) The
Ghassulian culture was first excavated at the site of
Teleilat el-Ghassul, located near the northern shore of the
Dead Sea. Since then, over a hundred sites have been excavated throughout the southern Levant, in the Jordan Valley, the
Beersheba Valley, the Coastal Plain, the
Judaean Desert, the
Galilee, and the
Golan Heights. This period is considered the epitome of the Chalcolithic archaeological sequence in the Levant. The Levant Chalcolithic was succeeded by the Bronze Age circa 3500 BCE. During the early Bronze Age, the first cities of the Levant followed the rise of the dynastic states in Egypt and Mesopotamia. File:Chalcolithic Female Figurine, 4500-3500 BCE.jpg|Late Chalcolithic Chalcolithic female figurine File:Pottery Vessel of Ram Carrying Cornets, Negev, 4500-3500 BC (42311849955).jpg|Late Chalcolithic Pottery Vessel of Ram Carrying Cornets, Negev File:Copper Crown, Lost Wax Process, 4500-3500 BC, from Cave of the Treasures, Judean Desert (41406204710).jpg|Late Chalcolithic copper crown, made in the lost wax process, from
Cave of the Treasures File:Copper Ibex Scepter, Lost Wax Process, 4500-3500 BC, from Cave of the Treasures, Judean Desert (42312062225).jpg|Late Chalcolithic copper goat wand from
Cave of the Treasures, Judean Desert ==Contacts with Egypt==