The Crescentic Axehead was found about 5 years later at about 200m distance.[2]
As of June 2006, the Kfar Monash Hoard was on display in the Israel Museum.
Identification of the 800 Copper Plates
There has been conflicting ideas to the purpose of the 800 copper plates. Although they have been assumed to be scales of armor from an Egyptian army unit, as proposed by archaeologist Shmuel Yeivin,[3] recent reevaluations have confuted this claim. Archaeologist William A. Ward proposed that the scales were means of barter or a reserve supply of metal from the Syro-Palestinian area.[4] Ward arrived at this conclusion through several pieces of evidence: the scales were not attached to any jacket, body armor was generally not used by the Egyptians until the New Kingdom, copper was still very rare, and the plates were too thin for body armor.
2023 analysis
Several metal objects similar to those in the Kfar Monash hoard were found in this general area of the Levant. They were subject to metallurgical analysis, and generally dated to the Early Bronze Age. For example, objects from Ashkelon-Afridar, and from Tell esh-Shuna (the Jordan Valley) were seen as similar. Also the axes from early EB I Yiftah’el are seen as relevant.[5]
Kfar Monash objects were also dated, based on typological considerations, to EB IB,[6] similarly to the axes from Tel Beth Shean.[7]
The study of Kfar Monash hoard indicated that some of them were made of unalloyed copper.[8] The source of this unalloyed copper was found likely to be in Wadi Feynan, in southern Jordan. Such unalloyed copper was apparently mainly used for the production of tools.
Other objects were made using a CuAsNi alloy. This is the copper-arsenic-nickel alloy that is especially characteristic of Chalcolithic period Arslantepe in Eastern Anatolia (the upper Euphrates region). Nevertheless, the adzes that were made of this alloy were determined to be of "an Egyptian type".[9]
Objects from Arslantepe using such polymetallic ores are mainly ascribed to Level VIA (3400–3000 BCE), dating to the Uruk period.[5]
Segal, I. and Yahalom-Mack, N. 2009. Provenancing copper-based objects using lead isotope analysis. In, Panitz-Cohen, N. and Mazar, A. (eds), Excavations at Tel Beth-Shean 1989–1996, Volume III: The 13th–11th Centuries BCE (Areas S and N): 589–96. Jerusalem: Institute of Archaeology, Hebrew University of Jerusalem and the Israel Exploration Society
Hauptmann, Andreas; Schmitt-Strecker, Sigrid; Begemann, Friedrich (2011). "Bronze Age Kfar Monash. Palestine – A Chemical and Lead Isotope Study into the Provenance of its Copper". Paléorient (in French). 37 (2): 65–78. doi:10.3406/paleo.2011.5423. ISSN0153-9345.
Sebbane, M. 2003. The Kfar Monash hoard — a re-evaluation. Eretz-Israel 27: 169–84 (Hebrew)
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