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Gobekli Tepe by Andrew Collins
Gobekli Tepe by Andrew Collins











These converge in the centre of the design to give the impression of a stickman standing in front of the twin pillars (see fig.

Gobekli Tepe by Andrew Collins

In addition to showing T-shaped pillars, the bone plaque has various lines that seem to represent the enclosure’s retaining walls. The twin central pillars in Göbekli Tepe’s Enclosure D. The tiny bone plaque found at Göbekli Tepe and now on display at Sanliurfa’s new archaeological museum.įig. Some, like those seen in Enclosures C and D, were originally 5 to 6 metres in height and weighed as much as 15 to 20 tonnes a piece (see fig. 1), implies they signify the twin pillars found at the centre of all the major enclosures investigated so far at Göbekli Tepe. That the two T-shaped pillars shown on the plaque are side by side, their heads clearly visible (see fig. He saw something that everyone else had missed, and this was that the little plaque – just 6 cm by 2.5 cm in size, and no more than 3-4 mm in thickness – bore on its upper surface two T-shaped features like the T-shaped pillars found in profusion at the site. That was until Matthew Smith, a British telecommunications consultant living in Qatar, visited Sanliurfa’s new archaeology museum, just 8 miles (13 kilometres) away from Göbekli Tepe itself. It was found during routine excavations at the 11,500-year-old site of Göbekli Tepe in southeast Turkey, but no one had recognised exactly what the carved lines on the small bone plaque showed.

Gobekli Tepe by Andrew Collins

A tiny bone plaque in Sanliurfa museum holds the key to the orientation of the 11,500 year-old temple complex.













Gobekli Tepe by Andrew Collins