J6

The Eastern End of the Plaza and the Betili (Version 1a)

J6 Synthetic View / Stratigraphy

Emplacement for Unit J6

Patrizia Camatta – August 2010, December 2024, April 2025

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Principles

A discussion and explanation of how stratigraphy works within the Urkesh Global Record can be found in the GRAMMAR. In this section main features are described as they were found, avoiding interpretations of function, typology and chronology, which are discussed under deposition and typology. Emplacement is the static aspect of stratigraphy, it explains how things are in the ground at the moment of they are exposed. It aims to observe, document and describe all elements we find during excavation. The defining criterion is the orientation of the components, the way the elements appear to us when seen in place.

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Elements

On the basis of emplacement we can distinguish different elements: surfaces, build-up, amorphous amassment and ordered aggregation.

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Topsoil

Topsoil is the upper ca. 20-30cm of the tell surface. It is characterized by being a dusty soil including roots, stones but also some pottery and modern material. A good exaple of topsoil is f5.

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Layering or gradual build-up

Accumulations are the gradual build-up of debris and material due to human activity and, to some extent, the precipitation of natural debris such as dust and sand. For definition an accumulation is bounded by at least one wall and we can observe elements such as pottery sherds and small stones or pebbles, ash and organic particles with a horizontal angle of repose. In J6, 49% of the features excavated are accumulations, with a total of 148 elements within a total of 355. The upper 2m of J6 were accumulations, interrupted by floors, amorphous amassments or layers. We recorded different types of accumulations. Accumulations due to the process resulting from human activities and natural accumulations. During excavation is not always possible to give the correct definition, therefore we often used the general definition accumulation, or we had to change the definition to define better its nature. The list of all accumulations can be found in accumulation ^a1: The upper layers (about 2m) directly found unter the topsoil are characterized by the presence of small rooths, small stones and some pottery and animal bones. Few q-items were found in these accumulations. The soil is brown and soft, the elements contained in it form an inert matrix. The area is abandoned, the elements present in this accumulation such as pottery and objects are washed down from other parts of the tell.

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Amorphous amassment

The elements that define a feature as amourphous amassment is the random alignment of inclusions. The collapse of a building, the dump of material in a pit are examples of this category. More than 10% of the features excavated in J6 belong to this category.

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Dump

A dump is an intentionally discarding of debris. In J6 two dumps were recordered:

  1. With ^dump1 the matrix of the features changes drastically. Within the features included in ^dump1 we observed the masive presence of pebbles, animal bones, large stones and pottery sherds. The dump was found in all the southern portion of J6 (k65, k74, k75, k84, k85, k86, k87), under accumulation ^a1.
  2. A second dump in J6 is represented by ^dump2:

It includes f200, f306 and f293, characterized by a soft red soil with ash lenses and a large presence of pottery, clay lumps with seal impressions, tannur pieces, objects, bones, and kilin waste. This dump was found directly under pit f192 and covered wall f227 and glacis f300 (see also section w206).

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Fills

Four pits were excavated in J6. In this section are described the fills. For the pit cut see section below “cut”.

f87 Fill of a small round pit f92 cutting the brickfall. The pit was filled with a soft and fine brown reddish soil with pottery sherds.
f142 Is the fill of pit cut f122. The soil was soft, grey and ashy with several almost horizontal layers. It contained a large quantity of sherds, some complete vessels and animal bones and a small jar i11, seal impression q231.2 and sealing i12. It cuts the brown reddish layer f151.
f192 The large pit f199 was filled with different layers of reddish brown, brown and gray soil. The soil was soft and sligtly wet and ashy. The soil contained a proper amount of carbon, animal bones, a broken tannur f220, a large amount of pottery, roofing material, bricks, kilin waste, lithic and clay artefacts. Pit f282 removed the northern portion of the fill.
f282 The fill of cut f283 is similar to fill f192. Is a brown wet soil with some roofing material, tannur pieces and some pottery sherds.

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Collapse
A collapse of one or more buildings comes from east of J6 and covers almost all J6 and the lower portion of J2. The boundaries of the brickfall are sharp and defined, especially the bottom of it, which is bonded by ^glacis1. The glacis slopes toward south-west and while to the west there is an open free space (the plaza), the brickfall spread to the west and was not blocked. The matrix of the brickfall is well defined: the lower portion bf2 is about 1,5- m thick, consists mainly of complete to broken mud bricks, while the topmost portion bf1 is about 1 m thick and consists of melted mud bricks, due to its longer exposure to wind and water. See expecially section w300.
bf1    bf

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Horizontal surfaces

In J6 we encountered several floors. Floors are, by definition, the compaction of soil with components such as pottery sherds and/or pebbles lying in a single plane and generally flat. In some cases the floor has been compacted by people walking by, in other examples we have floors where elements such as pebbles and sherds have been deliberately placed and compacted. Pavements are horizontal built surfaces. In J6 we did not record any pavements. An example of a pavement is the stone pavement of the Palace in A16.

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Floors

We recordered several floors related to the use of the area east of the monumental staircase and related to its walls and structures.

1. f239 is a pebble and sherd floor inside the bin a7.

A series of floors were found south and south-east of wall f129 and related to the use of the staircase in J2. Here are the floors:

1. floor2 (including f140 and f135) was found under glacis1 (f63) and above glacis2 (f110). It is a compact and hard surface including many pottery sherds and pebbles laying flat. In the floor we found an animal figurine q237.1 and a bead q238.2. The floor is cut by pit f122. The situation is well visible in t73.

1. f154 is a brown compacted surface with several small pebbles and some sherds. A head of a horse q261.1 and a metal blade q262.2 were found in the floor. The floor was covered by a thick accumulation.

1. f171 is a brown compacted and hard soil, sherds lying flat, abutting the estern betili f177, visible in t114. The floor was covered by an accumulation f170. While exposing the floor we found metal pin i19 and blade i21 .

1. f184 and f271 is the next floor found abutting the betili f177 and f100. The surface was found in all the square k84, is hard and highly compacted fine brown soil with sherds liyng flat and pebbles (concentrated in the western part). The soil contained some seeds and carbon. We found an animal figurine q394.3. The floor overlayied glacis f280, i.e. glacis6.

1. f273, same as f277 is a floor surface found in all k84 in front of the betili, under f171. Many small pebbles and sherds define this floor. The floor overlays glacis f280, i.e. glacis6 and covers floor f277, visible in v193b

1. f286 is a3cm thin and hard surface with few sherds and pebbles. It covered a thin accumulation above floor f303.

1. f303 is a hard and compacted thin floor above floor f312.

1. f312 is a reddish orange brown highly compacted floor presenting some lamination on the surface and mud patches, but dameged in surface. The floor is in section about 10 cm thick The same floor was excavated in J2 f359

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Ordered aggregation

When components such as stones or bricks are organised along a horizontal and a vertical axis, we can speak of an ordered aggregation of elements that concern construction, i.e. a wall, a drain, an oven. A pit, or the foundation pit too, concerns the intentionally man-made process of excavation and construction.

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Cuts

Four pits were excavated in J6. The fills are described above.

  1. A small round pit f92, about one meter in diameter, cuts the brickfall f92. The pit was filled with f87.
  2. f122 cut into f151 and filled with f142. The pit has a Northeast-Southwest orientation, is about 1.60m long, 0.67 m wide and about 80cm deep. The remaining part of the pit was excavated as J4f136.
  3. The oval pit cut f199 is North-South oriented and is 6m long and 3.60 m wide for a depth of about 30-50cm. It cuts dump f200, glacis f192 and wall f227. The pit is filled with ashy soil f192.1. f283 is 1.5m in diameter about 30cm in depth, filled with f282. It cuts pit fill f192 and glacis f275.

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Mudbrick walls

In this section the walls are described as they were excavated. There are 19 walls recorded in J6, 5 mudbrick walls and XY stone walls. Here are the mudbrick walls:

f76 Small portion of a mudbrick wall consisting of two visible rows of bricks. Between the bricks is gray mortar. The wall was found under brickfall f64 and was cut by pit f92.
f144 A mudbrick wall with NNW-SSE orientation at the extreme southern end of unit J6 in k87. The wall is one row high and is one meter in width for a preserved length of about one meter. The wall is cut by the trench k200. It follows the orientation of the structures found in Area C (see especially M 915 in A76 Nutzungsphase C7a, Bianchi et al. 2014 [to be added in MEL - ZJ408 mDP], Beilage 2), which are NNE-SSW oriented. The wall was abutted by the brickfall f143.
f166 A mudbrick wall with NW-SE orientation in k74, about 2.5m in length. Glacis f107 overlays it. The wall was exposed for a small portion, since we stop exavating here.
f233 A mudbrick wall with E-W orientation, preserved for 3-4 mudbricks in height (about 40cm) and is 2.70m in length and 1.20m in width. The bricks are 40×40×10cm large. The mudbricks are set on top of stones f201, used as base for the brick wall. The wall is the northern wall of bin a7.
f234 A mudbrick wall with a half moon plan. The wall is preserved for 2-3 mudbricks in height (about 20-30cm) and is between 20 and 50cm in width. The mudbricks are set on top of stones f197, used as base for the brick wall. The wall is the eastern and southern wall of bin a7.
f324 A mudbrick wall under walls f129 and 218. 6 courses of reddish-brown mudbricks (33 by 8cm) with grey mortar between the bricks.

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Stone walls
f201 7 medium and large limestones are set in a line with an ESE-NWN orientation, running 6m in length. The wall is about 1m in width and only one stone high, set on top of f203. The wall is used as base for mudbrick wall f233.
f197 The wall is crescent-shaped when viewed in plan. The eastern part of the wall consists of small to medium sized limestone blocks, 1-2 stones high and about 20-30cm wide. The southern part of wall f197 is oriented NNW-SSE, parallel to wall f201, and consists of 8 medium to large stones, about 4m long and 20cm to 1m wide (depending on the width of the stone). The wall is the substructure for mudbrick wall f234
f84 A line of 7 small and medium size limestones with NNW-SSE orientation, 3m long and 50-80cm in width, located in the eastern portion of J6 in k64
f130 Wall with NNE-SSW orientation flanking the staircase in J2 for all its length. The wall is 12.67m long, 1.58m wide at the base and 1.20m wide at the top. It starts at the southern side with two stones set in oblique fashion (Betili f100, f177, and stone f186) and ends abutting wall f218. The eastern face of the wall is exposed up to the base in a deep sounding. Here the wall is 8 courses high (2.85m). The northern end of the wall is only 1.80m high and rests on top of a mudbrick wall (f324). The masonry consists of medium-sized (20-50cm wide, 15-40cm high) irregular and angular shaped bloks, roughly dressed and with flat sides, set in horizontally laid courses with mortar betwheen the joints. The topmost course of stones is f127.
f127 Wall with NNE-SSW orientation laid on top of the first southern 7m of wall f130. It consists of large and medium sized angular and rougly shaped stones (50-100cm long, 20-70cm high) resting on top of a 20-60cm thick layer of mud mortar.
f152 A patch of 5 medium sized rough stones laid in mud mortar. Two stones are located 50cm to the east, probably part of a wall with NW-SE direction. The wall is about 2m long and 1m in width. At the same level was found a stone in Trench T267+T401 Phase C 6a Inst. 994 (Bianchi et al. 2014 [to be added in MEL - ZJ408 mDP], 109) and a stone wall in J2, f144. The wall rests on top of floor f110 = ? C 6a Inst. 710 or C2-Inst.872), which covered the 11th step of the staircase).
f101 13 medium and large stones, some of them are rough other are rougly dressed, set under f127 and directly in front of f130. It is a wall of about 2×1.70m in plan and 4-5 stones high. The soil between the stones was a clay with lot of pebbles and sherds f170. Abutting the wall was found floor f157.
f218, f219 The wall starts directly north of the staircase. Is a large stone wall running E-W for 8.10m and afterwards turns about 90° towards the north, where it continues for 6.60m (the remaining part is unexcavated). The wall is exposed to the south up to a height of 3.25m. It consists of 9 uneven courses of medium and large angular shaped stones. The eastern face is exposed for 4 courses and have the same construction technique as the southern face. The three western lowenmost courses are stepped resting on top of a mudbrick wall f324. The lowermost course is abutted by layer f300.
f227 A stone wall set parallel to f218 abutting wall f130, exposed for a length of 3.20m and a height of 40cm. The width is 90cm. Angular and irregular stones are set in regular courses. The upper stones were removed by pit f199.
f299 Two medium sized stones set in a regular line, embedded in f297, abutting wall f129 and set parallel to wall f127. Other stones were found at the same elevation and same position in unit J4, k100.


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Glacis

We have recorded in J6 a series of deliberately placed layers beginning to the east of the staircase flank wall f129 and dipping to the south-east, ending aproximately where the stone betili are located. These layers different in color, consistency and inclusions, are characterised by a sharp lower and upper boundary, are between 50 and 10cm thick in section, and become thinner to the south due to the sharp inclination of the lower underlying layers. The upper layers are sloping sligtly, whereas the lowes ones have a sharp inclination. We have named these layers “glacis”, especially because of their function in relation to the staircase flank wall.

These layers, beginning from the upper one, are:

  1. glacis1 (see especially f63) is the first of glacis we found. Is a very well defined compact and hard grey surface, found east of wall f127 in all the western half part of J6. It slopes toward southeast and on top of it are built walls f127 and f152. This is the latest glacis and differenty from the lower ones extends south of the staircase flank wall. The glacis is covered by the brickfall and covers glacis2.
  2. glacis2 is the second glacis found under glacis1 with similar charachteristics of the first one. The surface was sloping toward south-east f110, was hard compact very well defined with plenty of small pebbles and white calcite inclusions. In section is 10 to 60cm thick (f180) and has a brown gray coloration with some mudbricks. The surface extends south of the staircase flank wall.
  3. glacis5 is the third glacis found east of eastern staircase wall under glacis2 and covering glacis3. During excavation was labeled f151, a hard dark and wet brown soil with charcoal and patches of ash and some pottery. In this layer we found a group of frit beads i15. In the western section was recorded with f181 and here is 10-20cm up to 60cm thick.
  4. glacis3 (see especially f164) is a thick band (50cm to 2m thick) of granular soil, with a characteristich red-orange brown coloration, due to the presence of natural virgin soil (baqaya) and a lot of mud bricks and some pottery sherds. Its surface was well defined and has a sharp inclination toward south-east. The upper portion was removed by pit f199. This is the first of the series of glacis abutting wall f227 and giving the northern boundary for this layer.
  5. glacis6 is the glacis located under glacis3, east of wall f129 and south of wall f227. It slopes sharply toward south and has a clear surface, compact and grey in coloration, when excavated was grayish brown, ashy and fine in texture. The upper and lower boundary were well defined in section. Wall f299 was embedded in this glacis.

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South of wall f218 were recorded similar layers. These layers are:
1. glacis8 is the first upper glacis exposed south of wall f218, abutting its lowest courses. It is a compact red-brownish earth with complete mudbricks, calcite inclusions and small sized pebbles, consisting of a series of layers wich are visible in section (f314) and about 50-60cm thick. The layer slopes to the south and overlays ^dump2 (f200) and covers glacis7 (f300).
1. glacis7 is a hard and compact layer with small pebbles and few sherds lying flat in surface. It abuts to the south wall f227 and was found underglacis8 and ^dump2 (f200). This glacis was exposed but not excavated.

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