Latitude and longitude of Samad al-Shan

Satellite map of Samad al-Shan

Samad al-Shan (22°48'N; 58°09'E) is an archaeological site in the Sharqiyah province where Late Iron Age remains were first identified, hence the Samad Period or assemblage. The site was discovered by archaeological surveyors from Harvard University (1971). It is located 2 km east of the village of al-Maysar (since c. 1995 al-Moyassar). The excavation of this site (1981-1982) by Burkhard Vogt, Gerd Weisgerber and Paul Yule, (1987-1998) of the German Mining Museum, Bochum and later University of Heidelberg documented some 260 graves which span the Bronze Age to Late Iron Age in the Sultanate of Oman. Samad is the type-site for the non-writing Late Iron Age of Central Oman in south-eastern Arabia. This cultural assemblage evidences protoscript in the form of characters scratched onto pottery vessels. It is preceded by the Early Iron Age which differs in terms of pottery from that distributed in the neighbouring present-day United Arab Emirates.

Latitude: 22° 48' 23.99" N
Longitude: 58° 08' 60.00" E

Nearest city to this article: Ibrā’

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GPS coordinates of Samad al-Shan, Oman

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