Shepherd Neolithic

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Geographical rangeLebanon
Datescirca 10,200 B.C.E. — circa 8,800 B.C.E.
Shepherd Neolithic
Geographical rangeLebanon
PeriodEpipaleolithic
Datescirca 10,200 B.C.E. — circa 8,800 B.C.E.
Type siteQaa, Maqne
Major sitesHermel, Kamouh el Hermel, Douris, Hermel, Kamouh el Hermel, Qalaat Tannour, Rayak North, Riha Station
Preceded byNatufian culture
Followed byPre-Pottery Neolithic A

Shepherd Neolithic is a name given by archaeologists to a style (or industry) of small flint tools from the Hermel plains in the north Beqaa Valley, Lebanon.[1]

Map of Lebanon showing important sites that were occupied in the Shepherd Neolithic (clickable map)

The Shepherd Neolithic industry has been insufficiently studied and was provisionally named based on a limited typology collected by Jesuit archaeologist "Père" Henri Fleisch.[2] Lorraine Copeland and Peter J. Wescombe suggested it was possibly "of quite late date".[2]

A shepherd with sheep on a mountainside. Sheep were among the first animals to be domesticated by humankind; the domestication date is estimated to fall between nine and eleven thousand years ago in Mesopotamia.[3][4][5][6]Henri Fleisch suggested that the Shepherd Neolithic industry could have been used by nomadic shepherds.[7][8]

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