2,000-Year-Old Arrow Discovered in Dead Sea Cave

By Joseph PatrichRobert H. Eisenman

Sidebar to: Hideouts in the Judean Wilderness

A unique find—a 30-inch-long arrow made from a reed—has been discovered in a Judean wilderness cave. The extraordinary low humidity of the cave environment, like that of the famous caves near Qumran where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found, had preserved the shaft since the end of Iron Age II, about 600 B.C.E. In the protective environment, even traces of black and white paint were still visible at the end of the shaft, where a convex slot once held the string of a bow. The broken tip of the shaft was probably damaged when the arrow struck the wall of the cave. On the floor nearby, excavators found the arrow’s 3-inch-long iron head—also remarkably well preserved.

Located less than a mile south of the ruins at Qumran, the cave is about 100 feet deep, making it the largest of the caves explored in this area. The interior of the cave showed no evidence of habitation, but a large terrace in front of the cave revealed a floor made from mud mixed with palm leaves. Perhaps this floor on the 50-foot-long, 20-foot-wide terrace belonged to a hut of one of the members of the Dead Sea sect, which had its headquarters in nearby Qumran.

Join the BAS Library!

Already a library member? Log in here.

Institution user? Log in with your IP address.