,
Haifa In 1961, Israeli archaeologist
Pessah Bar-Adon discovered a hoard of
Chalcolithic artifacts in a cave on the northern side of Nahal Mishmar, known since as the Treasure Cave. The hoard consisted of 442 decorated objects made of copper and bronze (429 of them), ivory and stone, including 240 mace heads, about 100 scepters, 5 crowns, powder horns, tools and weapons. Archaeologist
David Ussishkin has suggested the hoard was the cultic furniture of the abandoned
Chalcolithic Temple of Ein Gedi. Prominent finds from the hoard are currently on display in the archaeology wing of the
Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Items in the hoard belong to the
Ghassulian culture and the Nahal Mishmar hoard is the only hoard of this culture. It is probable that the
copper used for producing them was mined in
Wadi Feynan. Many of these copper objects were made using the
lost-wax process, one of the earliest known uses of this complex technique.
Carbon-14 dating of the reed mat which was used to wrap the objects points that it was used circa 3500 B.C.E. During this period the use of
copper became widespread throughout the Levant which also led to social changes in the region. ==See also==