Hundreds of stone monuments scattered across northwestern Saudi Arabia may represent the oldest known ritual site on Earth.
Researchers studying mustatils, courtyards made from sandstone blocks, date them to about 7,000 years ago, making them millennia older than Stonehenge or the Pyramids at Giza.
Surveying the region by helicopter, the team found over 1,000 mustatils, more than twice the previous estimates.
The theory is that the structures were used during ritual by members of a cattle cult, who sacrificed cows, goats and sheep to their unknown god.
The mustatils, named after the Arabic word for rectangle, received little attention when they were first discovered in the 1970s.
More recently, archaeologists at the University of Western Australia in Perth explored the mysterious structures, flying by helicopter over 77,000 square miles of AlUla and Khaybar.
They found more than 1,000 mustatils– over twice as many as previously thought existed.
The structures range in length from 65 feet to nearly 2,000 feet, with some sandstone boulders used to make them weigh half a ton.
Typically, a mustatil had long walls around a central courtyard, with an entry at one end and rubble platform, or 'head,' at the other.
They may also include an orthostat, or upright stone, in a central chamber.
Some entranceways were blocked up with rubble, suggesting the structures were decommissioned at some point.
Mustatils were typically clustered in groups of between 2 and 20 and, given their monumental size, large groups of people would have had to work together to build them.
Earlier studies speculated the structures were used as pens for livestock, but the walls of the mustatils were too low to enclose animals.
In a report published this week in the journal Antiquity, researchers say they believe the strange courtyards were used for religious rites.
'It's not designed to keep anything in, but to demarcate the space that is clearly an area that needs to be isolated,' lead author Hugh Thomas told New Scientist.
Fragments of cow, sheep, goats and gazelle horns and skulls found at one mustatil suggest the society that built them used animal sacrifices in their rituals.
The recent excavations reveal 'the earliest evidence for a cattle cult in the Arabian Peninsula,' the team's report reads. 'As such, mustatils are amongst the earliest stone monuments in Arabia and globally one of the oldest monumental building traditions yet identified.'
There may have been a procession involved with the ritual, as the mustatils' narrow entranceways 'indicate that the structures were accessed in single file,' the team wrote.
By radiocarbon dating the skulls, Thomas and his colleagues dated the mustatil to between 5300 and 5000 BC, predating Stonehenge by more than 2,500 years and making them 'the first large-scale, monumental ritual landscape anywhere in the world,' according to co-author Melissa Kennedy, assistant director of the Aerial Archaeology in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia project (AAKSA).
Rock art in the era from the same time period showed 'scenes of both cattle herding and hunting,' the team wrote, lending credence to the cattle-cult theory.
Kennedy told Art Newspaper the structures' widespread distribution, size and uniformity 'suggests a common religious belief may have been held over a huge part of northwest Arabia during the Late Neolithic, a feature that is so far unparalleled anywhere in the world.'
Source: Daily Mail, Cambridge
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Researchers studying mustatils, courtyards made from sandstone blocks, date them to about 7,000 years ago, making them millennia older than Stonehenge or the Pyramids at Giza.
Surveying the region by helicopter, the team found over 1,000 mustatils, more than twice the previous estimates.
The theory is that the structures were used during ritual by members of a cattle cult, who sacrificed cows, goats and sheep to their unknown god.
The mustatils, named after the Arabic word for rectangle, received little attention when they were first discovered in the 1970s.
More recently, archaeologists at the University of Western Australia in Perth explored the mysterious structures, flying by helicopter over 77,000 square miles of AlUla and Khaybar.
They found more than 1,000 mustatils– over twice as many as previously thought existed.
The structures range in length from 65 feet to nearly 2,000 feet, with some sandstone boulders used to make them weigh half a ton.
Typically, a mustatil had long walls around a central courtyard, with an entry at one end and rubble platform, or 'head,' at the other.
They may also include an orthostat, or upright stone, in a central chamber.
Some entranceways were blocked up with rubble, suggesting the structures were decommissioned at some point.
Mustatils were typically clustered in groups of between 2 and 20 and, given their monumental size, large groups of people would have had to work together to build them.
Earlier studies speculated the structures were used as pens for livestock, but the walls of the mustatils were too low to enclose animals.
In a report published this week in the journal Antiquity, researchers say they believe the strange courtyards were used for religious rites.
'It's not designed to keep anything in, but to demarcate the space that is clearly an area that needs to be isolated,' lead author Hugh Thomas told New Scientist.
Fragments of cow, sheep, goats and gazelle horns and skulls found at one mustatil suggest the society that built them used animal sacrifices in their rituals.
The recent excavations reveal 'the earliest evidence for a cattle cult in the Arabian Peninsula,' the team's report reads. 'As such, mustatils are amongst the earliest stone monuments in Arabia and globally one of the oldest monumental building traditions yet identified.'
There may have been a procession involved with the ritual, as the mustatils' narrow entranceways 'indicate that the structures were accessed in single file,' the team wrote.
By radiocarbon dating the skulls, Thomas and his colleagues dated the mustatil to between 5300 and 5000 BC, predating Stonehenge by more than 2,500 years and making them 'the first large-scale, monumental ritual landscape anywhere in the world,' according to co-author Melissa Kennedy, assistant director of the Aerial Archaeology in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia project (AAKSA).
Rock art in the era from the same time period showed 'scenes of both cattle herding and hunting,' the team wrote, lending credence to the cattle-cult theory.
Kennedy told Art Newspaper the structures' widespread distribution, size and uniformity 'suggests a common religious belief may have been held over a huge part of northwest Arabia during the Late Neolithic, a feature that is so far unparalleled anywhere in the world.'
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