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In the ancient Near East the most successful intestinal parasites were whipworm, roundworm, Taenia tapeworm, and pinworm. While roundworm and whipworm are commonly found in early agricultural societies, the repeated presence of Taenia tapeworm in Near Eastern populations over time suggests that it was particularly suited to the climate and diet of the region. The presence of schistosomiasis at Tell Zeidan during the Chalcolithic period appears to be the earliest evidence so far identified for the invention of a new technology by humans increasing the risk of spread of an infectious disease. Agricultural irrigation was first developed in the Near East around 7500 BCE, and these irrigation systems allow breeding of the water snails that can spread the schistosomiasis when people wade through areas of standing freshwater. Head lice and body lice were also present in the region, and head lice in particular seem to have been present from the earliest prehistoric populations there. The development of wooden delousing combs, coupled with the arid climate that preserved them, has resulted in a strong body of evidence for head lice and their eggs.
This chapter contrasts the remarkable scarcity of visual imagery during the Early Bronze Age (EBA) of the southern Levant with the wealth of such imagery in the Chalcolithic period. The change between these two periods is not only associated with the disappearance of visual arts, but is manifest as well in the abandonment of settlements and the formation of a smaller number of new ones, either in the same places or at other locations The chapter discusses two cases, the Judean Desert and the Golan, which coupled with the observations regarding the abrupt end of the Chalcolithic mentalité and the disappearance of visual expressions, suggest that this period ended with multiple iconoclastic events, followed by a major symbolic reformation. The violent iconoclastic events that took place during the transition from the Chalcolithic to the EBA paved the way for a new aniconic discourse adopted by the people of southern Levantine society for centuries.
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