Downingfoundation
downingfoundation.org › home › our impact › gobekli tepe, turkey (early neolithic ceremonial center) Gobekli Tepe, Turkey (Early Neolithic Ceremonial Center) - The Downing Family Foundation
October 13, 2020 - Göbekli Tepe is an Early Neolithic site of enormous significance, featuring 5-meter-high monolithic pillars carved in relief and dating to 10,000 or more years ago. Erected within circular “temple” structures, the latest excavations have revealed that these structures likely covered the ...
Google
artsandculture.google.com › story › göbekli-tepe-turkey-unesco › 3wXxoXJ7tDcpLA Göbekli Tepe, Turkey — Google Arts & Culture
By UNESCO World Heritage · Megalithic structures (2018) by Göbekli TepeUNESCO World Heritage
The Tepe Telegrams
tepetelegrams.wordpress.com › tag › gobekli-tepe Göbekli Tepe – The Tepe Telegrams
Posts about Göbekli Tepe written by Laura and Oliver
TheTravel
thetravel.com › home › destinations › still excavating gobekli tepe: what's been most recently discovered Still Excavating Gobekli Tepe: What's Been Most Recently Discovered
May 13, 2020 - Manage Your List ... Gobekli Tepe might be one of the most significant discoveries the world has ever known. Located in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey, this archeological wonder continues to reveal truths about the ancient world that many previously never considered.
UNESCO
whc.unesco.org › en › list › 1572 › gallery Göbekli Tepe - Gallery - UNESCO World Heritage Centre
Located in the Germuş mountains of south-eastern Anatolia, this property presents monumental round-oval and rectangular megalithic structures erected by hunter-gatherers in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic age between ...
Gobekli
gobekli.io › home › about About - Gobekli.io
November 15, 2022 - About Gobekli Gobekli Inc. is named after Gobekli Tepe in Turkey, a monument from birth of civilization that...
Interestingengineering
interestingengineering.com › news › lists › gobekli tepe: the world’s first temple that’s 6,000 years older than stonehenge Gobekli Tepe: The world’s first temple that’s 6,000 years older than Stonehenge
November 11, 2022 - Named after the hill it is found on, Gobekli Tepe is one of the world’s most exciting yet strangest ancient sites. And it is not alone. Around a dozen other sites of similar age are also under excavation in the so-called “Stone Hills” area — an area extending for about 100 square kilometres ...
TheTravel
thetravel.com › home › gobekli tepe: 15 things about the archaeological site in turkey (that remain unexplained) Gobekli Tepe: 15 Things About The Archaeological Site In Turkey (That Remain Unexplained)
January 7, 2020 - Göbekli Tepe in Turkey is one of the most puzzling archaeological finds of all time and even pre-dates the Egyptian pyramids.
Bizarrejourneys
bizarrejourneys.com › home › gobekli tepe: interview with excavation team Gobekli Tepe - Interview, Theories, Discovery | Archeology
April 1, 2021 - Gobekli Tepe located in Turkey is introduced to us in this interview by a member of excavation team. Theories, discovery and impact.
Haaretz
haaretz.com › archaeology › 2022-06-07 › ty-article-magazine › visiting-gobekli-tepe-the-worlds-earliest-temple-built-in-a-paradise-that-is-no-more › 00000181-3ded-d207-a795-7ded6a9c0000 Visiting Göbekli Tepe: The World’s ‘Earliest Temple,’ Built in a Paradise That Is No More - Archaeology - Haaretz.com
June 7, 2022 - Around 12,000 Years Ago, Hunter-gatherers Made a Vast Social Leap and Built Monumental Public Sites. What Was Different in Prehistoric Southeast Turkey? And What Did They Actually Create? Reducing These Stone Circles to ‘Temples’ Is to Underrate Them, Says Head Archaeologist Necmi Karul
ResearchGate
researchgate.net › figure › Goebekli-Tepe-Enclosure-D-P20-with-snake-aurochs-and-fox-View-from-the-north_fig1_237785162 – Göbekli Tepe. Enclosure D – P20, with snake, aurochs and fox. View... | Download Scientific Diagram
Download scientific diagram | – Göbekli Tepe. Enclosure D – P20, with snake, aurochs and fox. View from the north. Photograph I. Wagner. © Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Berlin. from publication: Animals in the Symbolic World of Pre-Pottery Neolithic Göbekli Tepe, South-eastern ...
Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Karahan_Tepe Karahan Tepe - Wikipedia
2 weeks ago - Karahan Tepe (Kurdish: Girê Keçel) is an archaeological site in Şanlıurfa Province in Turkey. The site is close to Göbekli Tepe and archaeologists have also uncovered T-shaped stelae there and believe that the sites are related. According to Daily Sabah, "The excavations have uncovered ...
Dainst
dainst.blog › the-tepe-telegrams › visiting-gobekli-tepe Visiting Göbekli Tepe – Tepe Telegrams
From the Göbekli Tepe Research Project · The archaeological site is located about 15 km NE of the provincial capital Şanlıurfa. Turkish Airlines operates daily flights from Istanbul and Ankara
Dainst
dainst.blog › the-tepe-telegrams › tag › neolithic neolithic – Tepe Telegrams
From the Göbekli Tepe Research Project · You haven’t been hearing much from us lately. The reason was the catastrophic earthquake and the heavy rainfall event shortly afterwards in Şanlıurfa this year, which cuased immense suffering in the region. We didn’t feel that posting regular ...
Dainst
dainst.blog › the-tepe-telegrams › the-research-project The Site – Tepe Telegrams
From the Göbekli Tepe Research Project · Göbekli Tepe seen from the southeast (Photo: K. Schmidt, DAI, DAI-IST-GT2009-KS-8252)
Quora
quora.com › What-is-the-meaning-of-Gobekli-Tepe-How-did-this-name-come-to-be-associated-with-the-archaeological-site What is the meaning of Gobekli Tepe? How did this name come to be associated with the archaeological site? - Quora
Answer (1 of 3): The name "Göbekli Tepe" is of Turkish origin and translates to "Potbelly Hill" or "Belly Hill." It is associated with the archaeological site located in modern-day Turkey. The name comes from the mound's distinctive shape, resembling a potbelly or a rounded hill.
Gobeklitepe
gobeklitepe.info Gobekli Tepe
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