Happy to report a just published article, an additional outcome of the Canadian SSHRC grant that Haskel Greenfield and I received more than a decade ago. The paper, spearheaded by Jeremy Beller is a study of the recycling of groundstone objects in the EB III domestic neighbourhood in Area E of Tell es-Safi/Gath.
The full title is:
Beller, J. A., H. J. Greenfield, S. J. Richardson, S. Albaz, and A. M. Maeir. 2026. “A Longue Durée Perspective of Household Sustainability in the Early Bronze Age Southern Levant: Groundstone Recycling at Tell eṣ-Ṣafi/Gath, Israel.” Journal of Field Archaeology https://doi.org/10.1080/00934690.2026.2696687.
Here is the abstract:
Among early urban societies of the southern Levant, the nature of commodity usage and houseorganization is relatively underexplored. Recent excavations at Tell eṣ-Ṣâfi/Gath, Israel, have uncovered a large Early Bronze Age settlement with a domestic neighborhood containing multiple successive phases of occupation. These phases have yielded a combined groundstone assemblage with objects of a variety of types, lithologies, and conditions. We report a cross-reference evaluation of these variables, focusing on their patterns of secondary use (recycling) and disuse. The results indicate that many objects were recycled as part of the construction make-up of floors, installations, and walls. Disparities between the treatment of artifacts of local and non-local lithologies are highlighted, which reflect different attitudes towards their perceived utility and value. Recycling practices appear as part of an intertwined system of pragmatic solutions, resource management, and symbolic attachment.
On other news – we are now wrapping up a short, and final season of excavations in an Iron Age tomb at Tell es-Safi/Gath, which we have kept under wraps for the last few years. Although the tomb was disturbed during the Iron Age, we have some very interesting finds and results, which hopefully will be published in the not too distant future.

If you want a PDF of the article – drop me an email!




