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Touristic Sites In Jordan

Amman is the capital of the Hashemite Kingdom Of Jordan Near Amman (AlSalt,Wadi Seer) 1-- North and West of Amman(Jerash,‘Ajloun,Irbid,Umm Qais,Hemma,Umm al-Jimal) The Jordan Valley(The River Jordan,The Dead Sea,Deir Ain Abata Deir ‘Alla,Tabaqat Fahl) 2-- East of Amman: The Desert Castle Loop(Qasr al-Hallabat,Azraq Oasis,Qasr al-Azraq,Shomari Wildlife Reserve ,Qusayr ‘Amra,Qasr al-Harraneh,Qasr al-Mushatta Qastal) 3-- South of Amman(The King’sHighway,Madaba,MountNebo, Mkawer,Hammamat Ma’een,Karak,Khirbet al-Tannur,Tafileh ,Shobak,Dana Nature Reserve Wadi Rum) 4-- Petra 5-- Aqaba 6-- The Ancient Holy Land 7-- Islamic Holy Sites in Jordan

Thursday, February 16, 2012

Slag Heap

Slag Heap
Feinan, Jordan

Copper was mined at Khirbet Feinan [pronounced "fee-NAHN"], about 45km north of Petra, from Neolithic through Byzantine times and even later. The copper ore was cut and hauled out of tunnels dug deep into the rock, and then processed on the spot.

In this photo, Dr. Joe Greene, of the Harvard Semitic Museum, is standing upon a large heap of slag, the residue of countless centuries of smelting. The slag's black color is caused by iron residue in the ore. The surrounding hills, now barren desert, were once covered with forest. Over the centuries, every last tree was cut down to fuel the smelting process.

Feinan was served by waterworks, fields, workshops, barracks, and everything else needed to support the mine and the workers who labored here. Most of its buildings were as ramshackle as any mining town of the American West, and have long since disappeared. The ancient population was large. Thousands of graves, many marked with Christian crosses, are located in cemeteries nearby.

In the Roman period, labor in the mines was performed by convicts – a brutal sentence leading to almost certain death.

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