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Newly Discovered Paleolithic Shelters and Caves with Associated Lithic Industries from the Al Hajar Mountains, Oman

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Newly Discovered Paleolithic Shelters and Caves with Associated Lithic Industries from the Al Hajar Mountains, Oman
Abstract
Paleolithic research in the Sultanate of Oman, which is still in its formative stage compared to neighboring regions such as the Levant and the Iranian Plateau, requires extensive application of absolute dating methods on undisturbed cave and rock-shelter deposits to establish a reliable and detailed chronological framework for early human occupation and environmental change. In 2023, our field surveys across the governorates of Ad Dakhiliyah and Ad Dhahirah identified a wide range of rock shelters, each with distinct geomorphological and archaeological potential (Beshkani 2023). For the first time, we propose that several inselbergs surrounding the Wilayat of Manah- most notably Karsha Rock (Jabal Sarouj), located within the residential area of Karsha and previously known primarily for its Islamic- period villages and fortifications- were likely occupied during the Late Paleolithic and Neolithic periods. In the outskirts of Ibri, where the Umm er Radhuma Formation provides a favorable lithological context for speleogenesis, our preliminary studies attribute the dispersed lithic artifacts discovered at the entrances of rock shelters to the Late Paleolithic.This evidence corresponds with increased precipitation during the Early Holocene and suggests a demographic expansion and intensification of habitation along the foothills of the Al Hajar Mountains (Preston et al., 2015). We also registered three relatively large caves in Wadi Dhank. The characteristics and composition of the cemented deposits within these caves indicate the former presence of enclosed water basins prior to the collapse and subsequent exposure of their entrances. The occurrence of speleothems in Al Mihayniyah-2 Cave, located adjacent to the Dhank–Fida road, provides a valuable opportunity to reconstruct the paleoclimate of the western Al Hajar Mountains, a region that today exhibits a semi-arid to arid landscape.
Type
Colloque
Date
2026-02-01
Meeting Name
First International Conference on the Archaeology of the Oman Peninsula
Place
Mascat
Citation Key
beshkaniNewlyDiscoveredPaleolithic2026
Language
eng
Extra
Presenters: _:n194
Citation
Beshkani, A., Kindi, M. al-, Columbu, A., Sheryani, J. al-, Haji, H. al-, Pleurdeau, D., & Voinchet, P. (2026, February 1). Newly Discovered Paleolithic Shelters and Caves with Associated Lithic Industries from the Al Hajar Mountains, Oman [Colloque]. First International Conference on the Archaeology of the Oman Peninsula.