080
Answer: approximately 40 gallons
The ubiquitous collared-rim jar, or pithos, of Iron Age I hill-country settlements has long been at the center of the debate over Israelite origins and ethnicity. For decades, the large ovoid storage jar with fattened rim, heavy handles and telltale ridged or “collared” neck was taken as a sign of an “Israelite” settlement. With more recent discoveries of collared-rim jars in coastal cities and the highlands of Transjordan, however, the jar’s status as an ethnic marker has come under increased scrutiny.
Regardless of its ethnic attribution, this large vessel was ideally suited to the economic and environmental conditions of Iron Age I hill-country life. Because Iron Age I villages were typically located several miles away from the nearest spring or reservoir, the jars may have functioned much like in-house water tanks. When these “tanks” needed filling, villagers used donkeys to convey smaller, lighter jugs of water from the nearest spring back to the village.
The jars could also be used to store other precious liquids such as wine or olive oil. And they are ideally suited for storing grains and other dry goods as well. At the site of Tall al-‘Umayri in Jordan, excavators discovered several collared-rim jars filled with carbonized barley. These pithoi were found in situ inside a house, where the stored grain was protected from both rodents and the cold, damp climate of the Transjordanian highlands.
Answer: D) Glass refuse
Hundreds of thin glass tubes and broken glass rods were found in a pool in the Jewish Quarter of Jerusalem. They appeared to be the discarded remnants of an ancient glassmaking workshop. A few small glass-blown bottles were also found among the discarded glass tubes, making this rubble heap from the first century B.C. the earliest example of glassblowing in the ancient world. Scholars believe that this find reflects an experimental stage, when glassworkers inflated the ends of glass tubes without the help of metal blowpipes, which had not yet come into regular use. Supplanting the earlier techniques of glass casting and core forming, glassblowing was a major technical advance. From this period on, glassware became much more common—in some cases replacing clay pottery as the material of choice for tableware, receptacles and storage containers.
Answer: approximately 40 gallons