An impressive and mysterious 164-foot tunnel was unexpectedly discovered near Kibbutz Ramat Rachel in Jerusalem. What was it built for?
Routine archaeological excavations uncovered the unexpected and stunning when researchers discovered a tunnel while investigating the terrain before the construction of a new neighborhood.
“We were excavating in relatively rocky and exposed terrain when suddenly we discovered a natural karstic cavity,” say Dr. Sivan Mizrahi and Zinovi Matskevich, excavation directors on behalf of the Israel Antiquities Authority.
“To our amazement, as the excavation progressed, this cavity developed into a long tunnel. Parts of it are still collapsed, so the tunnel has not yet revealed all of its secrets.”
The tunnel has sparked debate regarding the purpose it served. Was it an ancient water installation? An underground agricultural or industrial tunnel? Was it related to quarrying building stones? Or was it a project that was never completed?
“The date of the tunnel is also a mystery to us,” say Dr. Mizrahi and Matskevich.
A mysterious tunnel
A staircase descended to a hewn opening that led to a tunnel, which had been filled with layers of soil for centuries or millennia, as archaeologists cannot yet confirm its age—though adjacent Iron Age sites might suggest an earlier date than they anticipated, considering how sophisticated the tunnel is.
Excavations at several points inside the tunnel showed that it reached a height of 16 feet and a width of 9.84 feet. Archaeologists discovered that the quarrying was “executed meticulously.”
The tunnel was built after careful planning and executed with tremendous effort. Whoever was behind it had both the technical knowledge and the resources to complete it.
Examining this spacious, formidable achievement, researchers wondered if the tunnel reached a spring source and was constructed to deliver water. But, upon further analysis, the walls didn’t show any signs of water damage. Additionally, there aren’t any water sources in the area, so it couldn’t have led to some unknown reservoir.
Archaeologists then debated whether the tunnel was some kind of underground agricultural or industrial installation, but its scale and uniqueness in the region ruled out that possibility. At least for now.
Currently, they are kicking around (along with rubble) the idea that the tunnel was intended to reach a chalk layer suitable for quarrying building stones or producing lime. The shaft they identified, which was carved into the tunnel’s ceiling perhaps for ventilation, as well as quarrying debris, might support this hypothesis.
A historical discovery in time for Jerusalem Day
The neighborhood in which it sits speaks to the tunnel’s significance, as “it offers a rare combination of modern urban development and the preservation of historical heritage.”
“The Israel Lands Authority is proud to advance sustainable urban development for the benefit of Jerusalem residents and the citizens of Israel as a whole,” a press release concludes.
“We are celebrating Jerusalem Day this week. This discovery joins many others being uncovered every day, hour by hour, throughout the city. The archaeologists and researchers of the Israel Antiquities Authority are constantly at work because this city never ceases to surprise. Usually, we have explanations for the discoveries we uncover, but sometimes, as in this case, we stand astonished and amazed.”