When the
Ta'amireh Bedouin tribe that discovered the first
cave at Qumran learned how valuable the texts they found were, they began to search for other sites that might contain more
scrolls. This led in the autumn of 1951 to the discovery of caves high up in the near vertical rock face of Wadi Murabba'at. With the confirmation that the new texts had come from Murabba'at,
Gerald Lankester Harding and
Roland de Vaux commenced official excavations there in January 1952. Four caves were examined. The remains discovered there reflected habitation, usually temporary, during the
Chalcolithic period, the
Bronze Age (including a
Hyksos scarab), the
Iron Age, and the Roman period. The latter is represented by a large amount of pottery and numerous weapons, including the blade of a
pilum (a Roman javelin). Numerous
spindle whorls were found, suggesting the presence of women working with yarn, and a coin hoard which included 149
Nabataean
drachmas, 51 imperial
dinars and 33
tetradrachmas of
Trajan. Most of the coins were minted in
Antioch. The spindle whorls and the coins suggest a lengthy encampment by bar Kochba forces in the area, while the Roman objects point to the settlement being overrun by Roman forces. The Murabba'at area was surveyed by
Pessah Bar-Adon in 1968, leading to the discovery of a fifth cave. In 1993 Hanan Eshel and Z. Greenhut discovered a cemetery which resembles that at
Qumran. ==Textual materials==