Millennia-old relics discovered in northwest Iran
TEHRAN – The Iranian police have recently discovered five clay relics, estimated to date back to the 1st millennium BC, in the northwestern province of Zanjan, a senior police official in charge of protecting cultural heritage has said.
The relics were discovered in the small village of Anzar in Tarom county after police had received reports from cultural heritage aficionados, Hossein-Ali Fazli explained on Monday.
Some digging tools were found by the authorities as well, the official added.
Zanjan is one of the cities founded by Sassanid King Ardashir I (180-242 CE). The province makes a base for wider explorations with the architectural wonder of Soltaniyeh, the subterranean delights of the Katale-Khor caves, colorful mountains, and the UNESCO-registered Takht-e Soleiman ruins nearby.
The first well-documented evidence of human habitation on the Iranian plateau is found from deposits from several excavated cave and rock-shelter sites in the Zagros Mountains, which dates back to Middle Paleolithic or Mousterian times (c. 100,000 BC).
ABU/MG