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Introduction
The materials that people used for their buildings depended mostly on environmental circumstances and from the availability of building materials. In north-eastern Syria, such materials are mostly mudbrick and stone. Wood was available, but in a much smaller quantity. Mud, stone and earth were the main materials used in the construction of the Temple Terrace. The earth came from the natural ground or from the settlement. Following, each of these materials will be described in more detail.
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Stone
In Urkesh, limestone was the most common type of stone used for construction. Basalt was used for door sockets and grindstones. In the Temple Terrace only limestone is employed.
Limestone is a sedimentary rock which occurs naturally in stratified beds. There is a great variety of limestone types, depending on the presence of other material and consequently it differs greatly in its physical proprieties. Some types of limestone are very durable and hard, while others are very soft and easily broken. Limestone has the characteristics of having structural strength, it is durable, easy to quarry and dress, and it was generally available at not too great a distance.
No detailed petrographic analysis has been undertaken for the Tell Mozan stones, therefore it is not possible to know with precision the characteristics of the stone as well its provenience. However, some plausible assumptions may be advanced.
Stones used at the Temple Terrace of Tell Mozan vary in dimension and quality. From the variety and quality of stones used, it can be assumed that different sources and quarries may have been employed by the ancient builders of Urkesh.
Small stones (10-30 cm thick) can be found in wadis, in hill sides and in the fields. Water in streams brings gravel and other lithic material from the point of origin in the mountains. The size and shape of stones transported depends on the velocity of the water. Mostly it consists of small stones, pebbles and particles. Such small stones can easily be gathered and lifted by a single man. The shape of these field and wadi stones is rounded and this form has to be set in a thick bed of mud mortar if used in the construction of walls. Large and medium stones are preferred for building walls and small stones are used as fill stones in large joints.
Flat angular stones with plane surfaces, more or less parallelepiped, are a good form, since they make for excellent bond and less mortar is needed. This type of stones is generally not dressed and can be found in limestone outcrops in the foothills north of Mozan. These are located at about 10 km north of the site and could have served as the source of the stones used in Urkesh. In this area, a few kilometers east of the Turkish city of Nusaybin, the ruins of the Byzantine town of Dara are located (Pl. 1a), and limestone quarries are situated east and west of Dara (Pl. 7). It is not known whether the quarries used in the 6th century A. D. were also used during the Bronze Age.
The ancient city of Urkesh controlled the Tur Abdin Mountains: sources speak about the city of Urkesh and Nawarbibl Kelly Buccellati, and the latter could be the Tur Abdin area, where the stone and metal sources are located.
Most of the stones used by prehistoric cultures were gathered from outcrops, rock bodies that stick out at the surface of the earth (Pl. 7a). Quarrying blocks of stone from outcrop beds requires organized labor and technical competence. In quarrying, the miners often made use of natural vertical joints in the rock. Firstly, the block has to be detached from its surroundings by cutting a peripheral channel and then splitting the isolated block away from its bed through chisels or by driving wooden plugs or wedges into the rock and wetting them so that they expand under great pressure.
Limestone in the outcrops is frequently so stratified that it can be split into blocks whose faces are so nearly parallel and perpendicular, that they do not need to be dressed. If there is need to dress the stone, it may be broken by hammering and stone may be detached with more precision by a metal tool with point or edge, like a chisel.
The process of using the natural vertical joints and fractures of the rock is well documented in the outcrops that were used as a quarry for the buildings of Göbekli Tepe, near the modern city of Şanlıurfa in the south-east of Turkey. The unfinished stone T-pillars used to construct the ‘Special Building’ have been found 300m from the site bibl. Kurapkat 2010.
The largest stones documented at the Temple Terrace of Tell Mozan measures 2 x 0.50 x 0.30 m, for a weight of about 783 kg (limestone solid is 2611 kg/cu.m.). Generally, the structures of the Temple Terrace are built up of large to medium stones of 1 x 0.40 x 0.30 m in size, for a weight of 313 kg, which can be transported by an ox.
The stones could be transported on rafts down the rivers or carried by oxen all the way to the ancient city of Urkesh. The way from the quarries to the site of construction was not too far (5-15 km) and there are several wadis flowing from the limestone outcrops to the ancient site, one of them flowed in the low mound.
A variety of stone types and shapes are used in the structures of the Temple Terrace, most of which are unworked or have a naturally flat, smooth surface. Only in a few examples are chisel or hammer signs visible (Pl. 42b). There are few stones of the steps of the staircase at the Temple Terrace presenting these signs: this is due to the need to create a regular step front. A different type of construction can be seen in another building at Tell Mozan. The foundation and substructure of the mud-brick walls in the Palace AP of Tell Mozan were made of roughly squared stones. They appear to be more shaped and worked than the stones of the temple terrace bibl. Buccellati F.. In Area C an administrative building with stone walls (Building XV) was excavated south of the Plaza JP. The walls are made of large, roughly shaped rectangular or square limestone blocks, so that the outer surface of the wall was regular. No mortar was used between the stones, but small stones were used to fill the joints. The construction technique used for the substructures of Palace AP and Building XV in Area C is the same. However, the construction of the enclosure wall of the temple terrace is different. The stones used for the revetment wall are irregular.
The stones are chosen very carefully depending on their use and function. For staircases and the ramp of Temple BA, the stones used are naturally smooth with flat plain surfaces and irregular or regular parallelepiped in form (Pl. 41-43).
The walls are made of undressed stones of irregular shape and size. They are laid in irregular courses, so that the thickness of the joints varies. The joints are filled with mud mortar. To reduce the amount of mortar, small stones are placed between the larger stones. (Pl. 26).
The stones of the Temple Terrace have the following dimensions:
|
type
|
diameter
|
weight
|
provenience
|
transport
|
use
|
|
small
|
>30 cm
|
>100 kg
|
littering fields, hill sides, wadis
|
1-2 man
|
fill, leveling
|
|
medium
|
30-50 cm
|
100-700 kg
|
outcrops, quarries
|
2-5 man
|
wall
|
|
large
|
>50 cm
|
<700 kg
|
outcrops, quarries
|
<5 man, ox
|
staircase, apron, escarpment
|
Stones of all sizes are used on the temple terrace. Small undressed stones are generally used as fill stones in walls between large and medium sized stones and under steps as a levelling course. Medium sized stones are the most commonly used, both for walls and steps. Large stones are more commonly found in the staircases and less commonly in the walls next to the medium sized stones.
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