Massive steep-scraper on a split cobble or flake with direct retouch all around and cortex on the crest. Found at Mtaileb I.
Flaoui or Fleywe is a small village located 17 kilometres (11 mi) northwest of Baalbek, Lebanon in the Baalbek District of Beqaa Governorate in Lebanon.[1] It is located near the north-south road that runs from Boudai to Chlifa.[2]
A Heavy Neolithic archaeological site of the Qaraoun culture is located in the area on fielded slopes of a small valley facing the Beqaa valley. It was discovered by Lorraine Copeland and Frank Skeels in 1965 with materials examined by Henri Fleisch. Worked tools were found made from abundant nodules of silicious, grey-yellow limestone. The material suggested to be Heavy Neolithic consisted of massive, rough cores and flakes with another group being found that showed resemblance to an assemblage termed by Fleisch the Micro-Mousterian. The site was under cultivation in 1966.[2]
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Archaeological sites in Lebanon |
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