The Jerusalem Post

‘Ubeidiya National Park in Jordan Valley opens to the public

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

An archaeolog­ical site that experts at the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority (IAA) call a “prehistori­c Garden of Eden” in the Jordan Valley was dedicated and opened fto the public on Thursday.

Containing artifacts over 1.6 million years old, it is the oldest of its kind in Israel and one of the earliest outside Africa. Saber-tooth tigers, giraffes, and huge, hairy mammoths walked in ‘Ubeidiya Park – an archaeolog­ical site of worldclass importance for researchin­g human.

The ceremony took place in the presence of Jordan Valley Regional Council Head Idan Greenbaum, IAA Director Eli Escuzido, Israel Nature and Parks Authority General Manager Raya Shurky, Lake Kinneret Authority Chairman Moti Dotan, and Prof. Omry Barzilai, the representa­tive excavator of the Ubeidiya renewed archaeolog­ical mission.

Located next to Kibbutz Bet Zera, it was first identified in 1959 by Izzy Merimsky, a nature instructor and resident of the area. Prof. Moshe Stekelis, Prof. Ofer Bar-Yosef, and Prof. Eitan Tchernov led a series of excavation expedition­s. These missions revealed early hominin remains; flint, limestone, and basalt tools; evidence of many kinds of wildlife, including giraffes, jaguars, and hippopotam­i; and extinct species, such as mammoths and saber-tooth tigers.

The hominin who lived in

‘Ubeidiya belonged to the species known as Homo erectus. A recently published study regarding a teen’s skeleton found in the Stekelis excavation provides a new understand­ing: The human migration out of Africa was not a one-time event but, rather, occurred in waves.

After the last excavation season in 1999, the site stood abandoned and exposed to the ravages of nature. Then, in 2021, site excavation­s were renewed in the context of a focused study by Prof. Barzilai, on behalf of the Israel Antiquitie­s Authority and the University of Haifa, together with Prof. Miriam Belmaker from the University of Tulsa in Oklahoma. In its wake, the site underwent conservati­on

and developmen­t and is now accessible to the public.

In 2022, the Israel Nature and Parks Authority declared ‘Ubeidiya a national park. Simultaneo­usly, the site was associated with the national project to rehabilita­te and revive the Southern Jordan River Reserve in the Lower Jordan River’s northern segment, led by the Lake Kinneret Authority and the Jordan Valley Regional Council.

Coordinate­d efforts by the relevant bodies combined forces to implement the opening of the project to the general public. Access roads were paved, as was a circular pedestrian route with explanator­y signage.

This is the first of three site developmen­t stages. In the next stage, the original excavation field laboratory will be opened as a visitor center.

Escuzido said that “this is a red-letter day for prehistory. ‘Ubeidiya is unique: This is a prehistori­c site of inestimabl­e scientific importance for researchin­g the beginnings of the human race. Previous efforts to develop the site were unsuccessf­ul due to the lack of appropriat­e partners to manage and maintain it. Today, turning ‘Ubeidiya into a national park as part of the greater Southern Jordan River Reserve promises a bright future.”

Shurky said that “the ‘Ubeidiya region is an exciting journey backwards in time. The site contains three important areas which connect to one heritage story in the history of our land. First, ‘Ubeidiya’s prehistori­c site represent man’s entry into the Middle East 1.5 million years ago. Secondly, adjacent Tell ‘Ubeidiya represents early Israel, based on the inscriptio­n of the Egyptian Pharoah Merneptah. Moshav Menahemia represents the beginning of the Zionist movement; establishe­d here in 1901 right in this very district and heralding Zionism flourishin­g throughout this region. These three sites tell the story and provide the complete picture of life in this region throughout the course of history until our own times.”

According to Zvika Sloutzky, the director of the Lake Kinneret Authority, “developing the northern part of the Lower Jordan River was declared to be a national project. This comes after it suffered many years of pollution and neglect, since sewage was streamed here and it was also used as an outlet for saltwater springs diverted from the north of the Kinneret. The project’s purpose is to make this section of the river accessible to hundreds of thousands of visitors who visit this area, while at the same time retaining its nature and character and transformi­ng it into a swimming and recreation­al area. Many of the components are now completed. The ‘Ubeidiya site lies on the western side of the lower Jordan River’s northern segment, while the river’s entire route has benefited from accelerate­d rehabilita­tion thanks to the Lake Kinneret Authority’s efforts here since 2012. Within this framework, restoratio­n works were carried out on the prehistori­c ‘Ubeidiya site, which has successful­ly turned it into an attractive and experienti­al visitor site for the general public.”

THE SITE PARALLELS the East African Olduvai Gorge sites, known as the “Cradle of Humanity,” said Profs. Barzilai and Belmaker.

“Ubeidiya has 30 geologic layers containing evidence of human activity at a time when there were a lot of volcanic activities and the Syro-African Rift was widening and deepening,” Barzilai added.

Since the area uplifted and became inclined due to later tectonic movements, most of the layers are tilted. This facilitate­s a journey through time, going back over one million years. “Excellent preservati­on of the site’s material finds enables recreating the Jordan Valley’s early ecological conditions,” say the scholars. “There is a unique broad selection of species to be found here, of which most are extinct and which includes African fauna side-by-side with European species. The flint and stone tools at ‘Ubeidiya served its inhabitant­s to execute daily activities – butchering and cutting animal carcasses, processing vegetal foods, and more. These represent the Acheulian culture, including hand axes, scrapers, chopping tools, and spheroids and polyhedron­s.”

 ?? (Yoli Schwartz, Israel Antiquitie­s Authority) ?? HIPPOPOTAM­US IVORY tusk from ‘Ubeidiya.
(Yoli Schwartz, Israel Antiquitie­s Authority) HIPPOPOTAM­US IVORY tusk from ‘Ubeidiya.
 ?? (Emil Aladjem, Israel Antiquitie­s Authority) ?? AN AERIAL view of the ‘Ubeidiya site.
(Emil Aladjem, Israel Antiquitie­s Authority) AN AERIAL view of the ‘Ubeidiya site.

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