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What was the significant about the building at Hili 14 ? Discuss how this site indicates that people were living in larger groups by this time , or coming into regular contact with one another in groups.

User JustinN
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Graves and Towers. The Hili (related to studying people who lived a very long time ago) Site not only provides the earliest known (event(s) or object(s) that prove something) of a farming-based village in the United Arab Emirates but also contains other (brown metal that's copper and tin) Age (3000 BCE-1300 BCE) and Iron Age (1300 BCE-300 BCE) villages, burial grounds and farming-based (basic equipment needed for a business or society to operate).

In the early (brown metal that's copper and tin) Age, from the end of the 4th millennium

BC, and the start of the early 3rd millennium, people

started to become (sitting a lot) in the country of Jebel

Hafit, especially on the eastern slopes of Oman

Mountains. This produced the round graves of the Hafit

culture, with their single room containing (more than two, but not a lot of)

graves; almost 500 graves of this type have been

identified in the Al Ain area. Although (compared to other things) rare

because of past destroy, funeral-related offerings have been

found in the form of pottery, small (brown metal that's copper and tin) objects,

wrote stones and fired pottery beads. They show/tell about

long/big sea trade relations with the south and center of

Mesopotamia (sculpted boats). The importance of the

the area was probably linked to its copper mines (Jebel

Hajar, Oman).

User Rica
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