Archaeologists in search of 6,000-year-old ruins in Sialk hills

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
layer, which does not provide us with any specific information, we will reach the bottom layer, which is expected to provide more accurate
according to preliminary estimates dates at least 5,000 years, according to Jebrael Nokandeh who presides over the National Museum of
current level is documented with three-dimensional imaging technology, Hosseinzadeh-Sadati explained.In addition, Nokandeh lamented that
I don't know how many tourists come to Kashan in a year, but less than 10% of Kashan tourists come to see the archaeological site because it
yielded interesting pottery pieces, metal tools, and domestic implements made from stone, clay, and bone that date from as early as the 4th
Due to this importance, determining the area and boundaries of this ancient site is the expertise of archaeologists and the final opinion
palaeobotany, palaeozoology, palaeoanatomy, diet, climate change and ancient metallurgy.In 2019, the Louvre museum hosted an international
According to Louvre, the event was aimed to cast a new light on the ancient site some 80 years after its first excavation to lay an
opportunity to present to the public the diversity of research and projects, as well as current issues of preservation and enhancement of
the site.According to the Louvre, the oldest levels document the occupation of the Iranian plateau from the Neolithic to the Chololithic
over more than two millennia
Then, around 3000 BC, the site is integrated into the vast cultural area called Proto-Elamite, during which specific writing appears.Much
later, in the Iron Age, the local culture, represented by beautifully painted pottery, is best known through the excavation of necropolises
This culture, which appeared new in the region, has long been identified with the Medes and fueled the debate over the arrival of new
populations speaking Iranian languages from which comes modern Persian.Several excavation projects at the site have so far been conducted,
beginning with a 1933 French Louvre delegation led by Roman Ghirshman; capping with a most recent project in 2009, which was led by Hassan
Fazeli-Nashli, a faculty member of the Archaeology Department, University of Tehran.When it comes to tourism, travellers regularly opt to
pass Kashan on their journeys between Tehran, Isfahan, Shiraz, and Yazd because this delightful oasis city on the edge of the Dasht-e Kavir
Kashan not only boasts a cluster of architectural wonders, an atmospheric-covered bazaar, and a UNESCO-recognized garden, but it also offers