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Marlene Britz, South Africa - 19.10.2012As a seasoned travellar and Travel writer, I need to advice fellow travellars from across the globe to contact Mevlut Uysal at Pomegranate Tour if they intend visiting this wonderful country, filled with natural beauty, culture and history! Mevlut is prompt, walk the extra mile to provide you with the best at also the lowest far...
Marlene Britz - South Africa
Turkey Travel Destinations - Gobeklı Tepe Gobeklı Tepe
Gobeklı Tepe is located in Southeast Turkey,it is the first Temple of world.You can join our Gobekli Tepe Tour as a joint tour of Nemrut Tour.
Göbekli Tepe is the oldest known man-made religious structure. The site, located on a hilltop, contains 20 round structures which had been buried, four of which have been excavated. Each round structure has a diameter of between 10 and 30 meter (30 and 100 ft) and all are decorated with massive, mostly T-shaped, limestone pillars that are the most striking feature of the site. The limestone slabs were quarried from bedrock pits located around 100 meter (330 ft) from the hilltop, with neolithic workers using flint points to carve the bedrock. The majority of flint tools found at the site are Byblos and Nemrik points. That neolithic people with such primitive flint tools quarried, carved, transported uphill, and erected these massive pillars has astonished the archaeological world, and must have required a staggering amount of manpower and labor.
Two pillars are at the center of each circle, possibly intended to help support a roof, and up to eight pillars are evenly positioned around the walls of the room. The spaces between the pillars are lined with unworked stone and there are stone benches between each set of pillars around the edges of the wall.
Many of the pillars are decorated with carved reliefs of animals and of abstract enigmatic pictograms. The pictograms may represent commonly understood sacred symbols, as known from Neolithic cave paintings elsewhere. The reliefs depict lions, bulls, boars, foxes, gazelles, donkeys, snakes and other reptiles, insects, arachnids, and birds, particularly vultures.
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