Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. The site of the ancient city of Ur, now far inland near Nasiriyah, Iraq, was originally located in the delta of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers where they entered what body of water?
2. In this image from 2009, U.S. soldiers at Imam Ali Air Base (also known as Tallil Air Base and Camp Adder) tour the reconstruction of walls at an archeological site within the perimeter of the base. What Biblical patriarch, revered by three major world religions, is associated with this location in southern Iraq?
3. This photograph, taken from a Royal Air Force plane in 1927, shows the site of the ancient city of Ur at the time Charles Leonard Woolley was leading archaeological excavations (1922-34). In Arabic, the site was known as Tell al-Muqayyar. What does this name mean in English?
4. These ancient Sumerian statues were recovered and returned to the national museum in Baghdad, Iraq, in 2008. When did they go missing?
5. "The Royal Standard of Ur" (circa 2600-2400 B.C.) was discovered in the tombs excavated by Sir Charles Leonard Woolley and his team of archaeologists in 1928. One side of the hollow box shows scenes of war, and the other (shown here) depicts scenes of peace. Like many artifacts from the royal tombs, the mosaic is highlighted by a bright blue stone. What is this material called?
6. The few Marsh Arabs who survive in southern Iraq live much as the ordinary Sumerian and Akkadian inhabitants of Ur and its surroundings would have lived 5,000 years ago. Of what materials do they build their temporary homes?
7. The brick at the base of this wall is covered with markings, inscribed while the clay was wet, perhaps to indicate which powerful person sponsored the construction. What do we call the wedge-shaped writing of the ancient inhabitants of Mesopotamia?
8. These trees on the banks of the Euphrates River are of the species Phoenix dactylifera, thought to have its origins in southern Mesopotamia, in the regions around the ancient city of Ur. What is the common name in English for this tree, which bears nutritious, high-energy fruit, long an important food in Iraq and around the world?
9. Charles Leonard Woolley's excavations in Ur uncovered in the "royal tombs" matching figures that depicted in gold, shell, and lapis lazuli two animals that looked much like this "Capra falconeri hepteneri" - a Markhor goat - standing upright with front hooves in a golden tree. What did Woolley and the museums displaying these figures call the image, based on a story in Genesis 22?
10. Found in the Royal Tombs of Ur, dating from 2600-2400 B.C., there are at least two other historical references in Mesopotamia to the specific activity that used these objects: a graffito from around 721-705 B.C. and a cuneiform tablet from 177-176 B.C. For what activity were these artifacts used?
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nannywoo
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stedman before going online.
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