Tell Zeidan

Tell Zeidan
Tell Zeidan is located in Syria
Tell Zeidan
Shown within Syria
Tell Zeidan is located in Near East
Tell Zeidan
Tell Zeidan (Near East)
Location Al-Raqqah Governorate, Syria
Coordinates 35°57′N 39°4′E
Type tell, archaeological site
Length 600 metre
Width 200 metre
Area 12.5 hectare
Height 15 metre
History
Periods Neolithic, Ubaid period, Halaf culture, Late Chalcolithic
Site notes
Excavation dates 2008; 2009
Archaeologists Anas al-Khabour, Muhammad Sarhan, Gil Stein

Tell Zeidan is an archaeological site of the Ubaid culture in northern Syria, from about 5500 to 4000 BC. The dig consists of three large mounds on the east bank of the Balikh River, slightly north of its confluence with the Euphrates River, and is located about 5 km (3.1 mi) east of the modern Syrian city of Raqqa (or Raqqa). This site is included within the historical region known as Mesopotamia and the Tigris-Euphrates river system, often called the Cradle of Civilization.

An international archaeological project, the Joint Syrian-American Archaeological Research Project at Tell Zeidan, were surveying and excavating the Tell Zeidan site. The project started in 2008, two seasons were completed. The third season was scheduled to start in July 2010. Muhammad Sarhan, director of the Raqqa Museum, and Gil Stein, director of the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, are co-directors of the project.

Part of the mound appears to have been looted after the start of the Syrian civil war in 2011.