The world’s oldest monuments may soon get an image makeover. A new project will promote and preserve Göbekli Tepe, home to the most ancient temple structures ever discovered.
Turkey hopes to eventually boost tourism at the site, which is in a region where tourism has declined because of the nearby Syrian conflict andrefugee crisis.
Since excavations began in 1995, the site in southeastern Turkey has changed the way archaeologists think about the origins of civilization. Its circular structures, with their elaborately carved stones and distinctive, T-shaped pillars, are more than 12,000 years old—older than the invention of agriculture or even pottery.
The early dates have upended the idea that agriculture led to civilization. Scholars long thought that when hunter-gatherers settled down and started growing crops, the resulting food surplus made it possible for people to organize complex societies.
T-shaped pillars at Gobekli Tepe are carved with stylized hands, belts and loincloths.
The left side of this unusual double "portal" at the 12,000-year-old site has carvings of wild cattle, a boar and a predator on the left side.
The tallest of Gobekli Tepe’s T-shaped pillars are 18 feet high and weigh roughly 16 tons. Carving them using only stone tools and moving them into place would have taken tremendous amounts of labor.
Stone heads were found in debris piled into the circular enclosures. One theory is that the site was used for funeral rituals.
Bas-reliefs of vultures, scorpions, and other creatures found on pillars at Gobekli Tepe may have been a way to deal with a frightening world through ritual. Vultures are often associated with death and the afterlife.
This limestone figure was found in an ancient enclosure at Gobekli Tepe.
Gobekli Tepe means “belly hill” in Turkish. New funding will help build protective coverings over the excavation area and make it easier for tourists to visit the site without damaging the ancient artifacts
A boar figure carved in limestone was found at Gobekli Tepe. Copious animal bones found at the site suggest feasting was a major activity there.
Göbekli Tepe calls that conventional wisdom into question. Klaus Schmidt, the German archaeologist who discovered the site in the 1960s, argued before he died in 2014 that it might have worked the other way around: The vast labor force needed to build the enclosures pushed people to develop agriculture as a way of providing predictable food—and perhaps drink—for workers.
T-shaped pillars at Gobekli Tepe are carved with stylized hands, belts and loincloths.
The left side of this unusual double "portal" at the 12,000-year-old site has carvings of wild cattle, a boar and a predator on the left side.
The tallest of Gobekli Tepe’s T-shaped pillars are 18 feet high and weigh roughly 16 tons. Carving them using only stone tools and moving them into place would have taken tremendous amounts of labor.
Stone heads were found in debris piled into the circular enclosures. One theory is that the site was used for funeral rituals.
Bas-reliefs of vultures, scorpions, and other creatures found on pillars at Gobekli Tepe may have been a way to deal with a frightening world through ritual. Vultures are often associated with death and the afterlife.
This limestone figure was found in an ancient enclosure at Gobekli Tepe.
Gobekli Tepe means “belly hill” in Turkish. New funding will help build protective coverings over the excavation area and make it easier for tourists to visit the site without damaging the ancient artifacts
A boar figure carved in limestone was found at Gobekli Tepe. Copious animal bones found at the site suggest feasting was a major activity there.
Göbekli Tepe calls that conventional wisdom into question. Klaus Schmidt, the German archaeologist who discovered the site in the 1960s, argued before he died in 2014 that it might have worked the other way around: The vast labor force needed to build the enclosures pushed people to develop agriculture as a way of providing predictable food—and perhaps drink—for workers.
At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Turkey’s Doğuş Group will announce Wednesday that they plan to spend $15 million over the next 20 years on the project, in partnership with the National Geographic Society. “Göbekli Tepe is our zero point in time,” Doğuş Group chairman Ferit F. Şahenk said in a press release.
Earliest Religious Site?
Newly gathered evidence from excavations at the site backs up Schmidt’s argument that the beginnings of civilization spurred the invention of farming. In the middle of each monumental enclosure are two tall T-shaped pillars, carved with stylized arms, hands and loincloths. The largest weigh more than 16 tons. Carving and moving them from a nearby quarry must have been a tremendous challenge, requiring hundreds of people and enough food to feed them all.
But archaeologists have yet to find evidence of permanent settlement at Göbekli Tepe. One recent suggestion is that the site was a regional gathering place. It’s perched on top of a bone-dry peak, with a commanding view of the surrounding mountains and the plains to the south.
“Back then people would have to meet regularly to keep the gene pool fresh and exchange information,” says Jens Notroff, a German Archaeological Institute archaeologist who works on the site. “It’s a landmark. It’s no accident they gathered there.”
In fact, smaller versions of the pillars, symbols and architecture carved into stone at Göbekli Tepe have been found in settlements up to 125 miles away. It’s as though Göbekli Tepe were a cathedral and the others local churches; hunter-gatherers might have traveled long distances to meet, worship and help build new monumental structures, sponsoring feasts to display their wealth.
“The feasting aspect is the easiest explanation for attracting a labor force to construct the enclosures,” Notroff says.
As they’ve dug deeper into the hilltop, archaeologists have found other evidence for feasting: After they were built, the stone enclosures were filled in with dirt, stone, and animal bones. Over the course of centuries, new structures were built on top of the backfill, creating a man-made mound. The debris includes tens of thousands of broken animal bones, including gazelles and aurochs, a type of wild cow that’s now extinct. There are also huge stone vessels, big enough to hold more than 40 gallons of liquid—perhaps early beer.
Tour Buses and Refugees
The new funding comes at a critical time for Göbekli Tepe. As the site has gained international prominence, it’s become a bona fide tourist attraction. Less than a decade ago, the hilltop was reachable only via a bumpy ride on a rough dirt road. The occasional visitor might be shown around by Schmidt himself.
Today, tour buses sometimes unload hundreds of visitors each day in front of a small visitor’s center, and Turkish travel agencies promote special Göbekli Tepe tours. There’s a gift shop and parking lot, and Turkey’s largest archaeological museum opened recently in the nearby city of Urfa.
Though excavation and research at the site are funded by the German Archaeological Institute and the German Research Foundation, funds from the Dogus Group, a Turkish conglomerate that includes tourism and media companies, will go toward building a new, larger visitor’s center and protective canopies for the structures that have already been uncovered, along with walkways and fencing to help manage tourism’s impact on the ancient enclosures.
“This impressive partnership between the Sahenk Initiative and the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism is sure to shed new light on Gobekli Tepe’s historical significance—not only for Turkey but for the world,” said Terry Garcia, chief science and exploration officer for theNational Geographic Society.
It’s good news in a region that desperately needs some. As Syria has become less stable, Notroff says, the flood of tourists to the site has visibly slowed.
Urfa is just a few miles from Turkey’s border with Syria, and is a key crossing point for refugees fleeing the conflict there. When the Syrian town of Kobani was under attack by ISIS last year, smoke from the battle could be seen from the mountaintop dig site.
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