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<< News >> Mulla Sadra Dam Drowns 7000 Years of History

Submitted by coldrum on Thursday, 01 January 2009  Page Views: 6943

DigsCountry: Iran The never-ending story of a historical site being damaged due to development projects and dam constructions seems to never let the minds of the people of Iran rest. This time, the same story is repeated for the 7000-year-old historical site of Mehr Ali Farsi in Fars province which was partly submerged as a result of inundation of Mulla Sadra Dam.

Although Iran’s Archeology Research Center has issued a certificate for carrying out excavations in this historical site, the Ministry of Energy has refused to fulfill its commitments, seeking to immediately inaugurate the dam after its construction was completed. This is while based on a memorandum of understanding signed a few months ago between Iran’s Cultural Heritage and Tourism Organization (ICHTO) and the Ministry of Energy, the Ministry was expected to coordinate its projects with ICHTO and is in charge of providing the budget for carrying out excavations in the vicinity of their development projects.

“Mehr Ali Farsi is one of the most important archeological sites of Fars province and archeological excavations in this historical site could lead into revealing many unknown facts about the pre-historic period of Fars province. Despite the fact that this historical site had been identified before the inundation of Mulla Sadra Dam, the authorities of the dam have neglected the necessity for carrying out excavations in this area and started the flooding of the dam in a very short time,” said Azizollah Rezayi, head of archeology team in Mehr Ali Farsi historical site.

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Note: Another chance for excavation of Mehr-Ali Tappeh, see latest comment

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"Mulla Sadra Dam Drowns 7000 Years of History" | Login/Create an Account | 7 News and Comments
  
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Archaeologists planning for Iran’s largest rescue excavation at Seimareh Dam by coldrum on Wednesday, 17 June 2009
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Archaeologists planning for Iran’s largest rescue excavation at Seimareh Dam

Archaeologists planning for Iran’s largest rescue excavation at Seimareh Dam reservoir
The Iranian Center for Archaeological Research (ICAR) is currently planning a rescue excavation project at the Seimareh Dam reservoir area in western Iran’s Ilam Province.

Forty areas in the region will be excavated by 40 archaeological teams during the project, considered to be Iran’s largest rescue excavation operation, which will be carried out during the second half of the Iranian calendar year beginning on September 23, the Persian service of CHN reported on Sunday.

During a series of rescue excavations in 2007, a team of archaeologists identified 100 ancient sites from various periods, including the Neolithic era, Bronze Age, Copper Age, and the Parthian, Sassanid, and early Islamic eras within the dam reservoir flood plain.

About 100 ancient sites from various periods, including the Neolithic era, Chalcolithic, Bronze Age, Copper Age, and the Parthian, Sassanid, and early Islamic eras have been identified a the dam’s reservoir during previous seasons of rescue excavations in 2007.

A great number of the sites will be flooded when the dam becomes operational.

The dam’s project officials have agreed to sponsor the rescue excavation operations, which will be performed over three consecutive seasons, ICAR Director Mohammad-Hassan Fazeli-Nashli said.

Signs of the Mesopotamians’ influence in the region have been identified by studies carried out on the ancient strata at the reservoir.

Traces of the Ubaid period, one of the eras in which the Mesopotamian civilization emerged, have been identified during the studies, Fazeli-Nashli said.

The Ubaid period includes I, II, III, and IV, which dates back to about 5600-3900 BC.

“The rescue excavations can help the archaeologists learn about cultural relations between the people living in the western Zagros region of Iran and the Mesopotamian civilization,” Fazeli-Nashli stated.

The construction of the Seimareh Dam is almost complete. However, the officials of the dam have postponed filling it for the rescue excavations.

The officials had previously announced that the filling of the dam would commence in early 2008.

The Seimareh Dam, constructed on the Seimareh River, is located 30 kilometers northwest of the city of Darehshahr.

Fazeli-Nashli had previously said that the archaeological sites discovered in the Seimareh Dam reservoir area are more important than the ancient sites obliterated by the Sivand Dam in southern Iran’s Fars Province.

In 2007, a number of archaeological sites were also destroyed in the Seimareh Dam reservoir area as a result of exploration activities by the Iranian National Oil Company.

http://www.tehrantimes.com/index_View.asp?code=192709
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7000-Year-Old Iranian Tappeh Won’t Give Up the Ghost by Andy B on Thursday, 01 January 2009
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Archaeologists were given a second chance by drought to excavate the Mehr-Ali Tappeh at the reservoir of the Mulla Sadra Dam in Fars Province, southern Iran.

The 7000-old-year mound and many other ancient sites were entirely submerged after the Islamic Republic’s officials at the Mulla Sadra Dam began filling the reservoir in May 2006.

The Mehr-Ali Tappeh has reappeared following a period of dry weather over the past few months and a team of archaeologists recently returned to the site.

“This is an ideal opportunity to resume archaeological excavations at the site,” team director Alireza Sardari told the Persian service of CHN on Wednesday.

“We could not reach the lower strata during the first season of excavations because they had already been submerged,” he said.

“However, artefacts dating back to the Bakun period (late 5th to early 4th millennium BCE) were discovered during the season,” Sardari added. Ruins of some residential areas, kilns, and a large amount of shards have also been unearthed.

The large amount the shards indicated that the Mehr-Ali Tappeh had been one of the more important prehistoric sites of the region.

“We aim to reach the lowest cultural strata of the mound in order to scrutinise the earliest habitations of the site,” Sardari noted.

The team has created two small trenches at the outskirts of the Mehr-Ali Tappeh and their excavating will continue until they reach undisturbed earth.

http://www.cais-soas.com/News/2008/October2008/29-10.htm
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Iran dam sparks row about ancient Persian relic by coldrum on Wednesday, 17 October 2007
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Iran dam sparks row about ancient Persian relic

For the people protesting against it, a new dam near these sun-drenched ruins may be more than an environmental upheaval: in it they scent an affront to the country's pre-Islamic identity.
For 2,500 years, the tomb of Cyrus the Great has stood on the plain at Pasargadae in southern Iran, a simple but dignified monument to a king revered as the founder of the mighty Persian empire. But some fear the dam and reservoir pose a threat to the ancient structure.

They say the project may increase humidity in the arid area near the city of Shiraz, which they believe could damage the limestone mausoleum.

That may seem far-fetched -- officials dismiss it -- but the row highlights deep cultural faultlines in attitudes to the Islamic Republic's wealth of pre-Islamic relics.

"This is an illegal project which will harm our historical heritage," said Mohammad Ali Dadkhah, a lawyer campaigning against the Sivand Dam and an associate of Iranian Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi.

He accuses the authorities of not paying enough attention to sites dating from before the Arab Muslim invasion in the 7th century of what is now Iran: "They don't care about pre-Islamic history."

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad officially inaugurated the dam, some 7 km (4.5 miles) away from Pasargadae, in April. Cyrus built the capital in the 6th century B.C. and is believed to be buried there.

Ringed by bare and tawny hills, Pasargadae is one of Iran's eight world heritage sites, though it is not as well preserved or famous abroad as Persepolis, erected by Cyrus' successors closer to present-day Shiraz.

Many Iranians still see Cyrus as one of their greatest historical heroes, who arguably created the first world empire and showed tolerance towards different faiths of his era.

Cyrus conquered Babylon in today's Iraq in 539 B.C. and freed the Jews held in captivity there. He is also credited with authoring a decree inscribed on a clay cylinder which some have described as the first charter of human rights.

"We are really proud of him. He was unique," said a man in Shiraz who gave his name as Reza Hosseini.

WATER

Government officials say the dam is needed to help farmers irrigate land to grow corn, rice, tomatoes and other agricultural produce. They have promised to closely monitor any climatic changes that result from the dam.

Iranian Vice President Esfandiar Rahim Mashai, who heads the state culture and heritage organization, has suggested groups "opposing the Islamic Republic" are behind the protests.

"It is far from here," said one guard at the dam site, which is slowly filling up. "There will be no damage."

People in the provincial capital Shiraz -- renowned as a city of poets, roses and beautiful mosques, as well as for its imperial Persian ruins -- are not so sure.

They complain of contradictory information about the dam's potential impact and say they do not know what to believe.

"If there is even a tiny possibility of damage to historical monuments we have to be very careful," said shop owner Omid Nejati, selling hand-woven wool and silk carpets, one decorated with a motif of the tomb of Cyrus.

Near the dam itself, even one of the farmers it is supposed to help was skeptical.

"We don't have water problems," said the 35-year-old man, declining to give his name because of the issue's sensitivity as he took a break from working the land. "The dam was a project to create job opportunities for people from other areas."

REVERED AND REVILED

In the mountains in the distance lies the Bolaghi gorge, which will be flooded as part of the project.

International teams have in the past few years excavated the area, believed to form part of a Persian royal road and to hold other archaeological remains, ahead of the planned inundation.

Farzin Fardanesh, a consultant of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, said nobody could tell for sure what the dam's impact might be. There was justified concern, but "no proven risk" to Pasargadae.

In his book The Soul of Iran, American-Iranian journalist Afshin Molavi describes how Cyrus was praised by the U.S.-backed Shah but criticized by the Muslim clerics and leftist revolutionaries who toppled him in 1979.

After the Islamic revolution, one prominent ayatollah branded Cyrus a tyrant, liar and homosexual and even called for the destruction of his tomb as well as that of Persepolis. "Fortunately, cooler heads prevailed," Afshin wrote.

Even so, not much remains of Cyrus' Pasargadae: his multi-tiered tomb is the most impressive building even though it was looted and emptied long ago.

The parched surroundings make it hard to imagine that lush gardens once encircled the imposing cenotaph before Alexander the Great crushed the empire Cyrus had founded around 330 B.C, his armies sacking and burning Persepolis.

"Unfortunately the government didn't listen to us," said Dadkhah. But 4,000 people have signed his protest petition against the dam, he added: "I never give up."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20071003/wl_nm/iran_cyrus_dam_dc_1;_ylt=An3DVmwMbjqdwF_1oDVyiGJFeQoB
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Forgotten Post-Achaemenid Archer Still Waits to Shout! by coldrum on Tuesday, 22 May 2007
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Forgotten Post-Achaemenid Archer Still Waits to Shout!

Continuation of archeological excavations in the vicinity of Salman-e Farsi reservoir, Iranian Fars province, resulted in discovery of a huge rock with relief of a archer who is riding a horse dating back to post-Achaemenid period (333-248 BC). This unique bas-relief is on verge of destruction.

Announcing this news, Alireza Jafari Zand, head of excavation team behind Salman-e Farsi Dam told CHN that this relief has been discovered at the furthest reaches of the reservoir of the dam, outside of the Sassanid city behind the dam. “This huge rock is 3.30 in 3.70 meters in size and has tones of weight. Although the dress of the horse rider is very similar to Achaemenid warriors, it belongs to post-Achaemenid period,” said Jafari.

According to Jafari, this relief will not be drowned by the inundation of the dam, but it has severely damaged over time and is on verge of destruction and needs to be repaired in the shortest time.

He further explained that post-Achaemenid bas reliefs are very rare and it is the first time such a unique relief has been ever found in Fars province.

Archeological studies conducted behind Salman-e Farsi Dam, Fars province revealed the existence of a 350-hectare city dating back to post-Achaemenid and Sassanid dynastic eras in the area which will be submerged by inundation of the dam.

This is while during less than three days excavations, archeologists succeeded in tracing some invaluable architectural evidence including a fortress, fire temple, bazaar, and residential dwellings in this historic site.
http://www.chnpress.com/news/?section=2&id=7126
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Discovery of a Prehistoric Site Behind Galabar Dam by coldrum on Tuesday, 22 May 2007
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The never ending story of discovery of a historical site in the vicinity of recently constructed dams in Iran has repeated in Zanjan province behind the Galabar dam, which has already been flooded.

“We started an emergency excavation behind Galabar dam in an attempt to rescue historical evidence before they are submerged forever. During the very first days of excavations behind the dam we succeeded in identifying a prehistoric site belonging to Copper and Stone Ages. The discovery came concurrent with our archeological excavations in an Islamic fortress which is located on the top of the hill,” said Abolfazl Aali, head of excavation team behind Galabar Dam to CHN.

The inundation of Galabar dam has been already started without getting the approval of the Cultural Heritage and Tourism Department of Zanjan province. This is while the authorities of the dam were already informed about the possibility of existence of historical sites behind the dam. The discovered prehistoric site...

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Iran dam opens amid heritage fear by coldrum on Tuesday, 22 May 2007
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Iran dam opens amid heritage fear

A new dam is due to open in southern Iran amid criticism it will flood an ancient site holding archaeological relics dating back 7,000 years.
The government says the Sivand dam in the Bolaghi gorge is needed by farmers in an area that has become desert.

Heritage activists have appealed to the president to postpone the flooding by some years so excavation can continue.

Archaeologists have discovered ancient wine making vessels, clay kilns and prehistoric caves in the area.

Many relics have been removed to be placed in a museum, but the site itself will be flooded which conservationists argue will be a huge loss.

But the government's going ahead with the inauguration of the dam because farmers in the area desperately need water for irrigation.

Persian empire

There has been much confusion about exactly what damage to Iran's ancient sites the Sivand dam will do.

Archaeologists, including foreign teams, have been working...

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