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Tel

A tel (plural tells or tells) is an archaeological mound formed by the long-term habitation and destruction of a site. The mound accumulates as successive layers of occupation—mud brick, stone, ash, and debris—are built up over centuries or millennia, often hiding earlier settlements beneath new construction. They are commonly found in the Near East, including parts of modern Israel, Jordan, Syria, Iraq, and Turkey.

In archaeology, tells are systematic sites for excavation. Researchers work in stratigraphic layers to reconstruct occupational

Etymology and usage: The term tel (Hebrew) or tell (Arabic) means hill or mound. Many modern places

Significance: Tells preserve long chronologies and provide insight into urban development, trade, and sociopolitical organization in

sequences,
date
artifacts
and
structures,
and
study
changes
in
architecture,
economy,
and
daily
life.
Tells
often
contain
multiple
dwellings,
defensive
walls,
public
buildings,
and
sanctuaries,
revealing
cultural
and
political
shifts
across
periods
such
as
the
Bronze
and
Iron
Ages.
in
Israel
and
surrounding
regions
adopt
Tel
in
their
names,
for
example
Tel
Aviv,
meaning
roughly
Hill
of
Spring;
tells
also
identify
ancient
sites
such
as
Tell
es-Sultan
(Jericho)
and
Tell
Megiddo.
ancient
civilizations.
They
are
essential
to
Near
Eastern
archaeology
and
comparative
studies
of
settlement
patterns.