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JERUSALEM (Reuters) — Israeli archaeologists racing against treasure hunters to search caves near the Dead Sea have discovered a trove of artifacts, including fragments of a biblical text, the like of which has not been seen for decades.
The finds, preserved by the hot, dry air of the Judean desert, also include the 6,000-year-old partly mummified skeleton of a child, and a perfectly intact, finely woven basket dating back 10,500 years that the Israel Antiquities Authority said on Tuesday was likely to be the oldest in the world.
The Authority has overseen a survey of more than 65 miles of cliffs and the caves carved or eroded into them.
The fragments of parchment, about 2,000 years old, bear biblical verse, written in Greek, and match a scroll discovered about 60 years ago called the "Book of the 12 Minor Prophets."
That scroll is one of a trove of ancient Jewish texts called the Dead Sea Scrolls that were found in 1947 by local Bedouin in the caves of Qumran, about 12 miles east of Jerusalem.
The collection, which has come to include texts discovered elsewhere along the western shore of the Dead Sea, provided a window into Jewish society and religion before and after the time of Jesus.
A flurry of exploration followed their discovery, but the search eventually petered out — until recently, when new pieces of scrolls and parchment appeared on the black market.
The likelihood that antiquities robbers had found a new trove spurred the Authority into action.
Since 2017, crews have been abseiling down marl and limestone cliffs and using drones to map hundreds of caves and hollows.
Many were filled with centuries of sand and debris, and about a dozen thought to be likely hiding places were excavated fully.
These are new pieces of the puzzle, and we can add them to our greater picture of the period and of the text.
–Oren Ableman, Antiquities Authority's Dead Sea Scrolls Unit
The new fragments of the manuscript were found in the "Cave of Horror," which years ago yielded up the 1,900-year-old skeletons of Jewish rebels who had fought against the Roman Empire.
"These are new pieces of the puzzle, and we can add them to our greater picture of the period and of the text," said Oren Ableman of the Antiquities Authority's Dead Sea Scrolls Unit.
"Even though these pieces are small, they did give us some new information that we did not know before."
The fragments allowed the reconstruction of 11 lines of text and provided insight into the parchment the text is written on.
(Reporting by Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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