Archaeologists have unearthed 400 Byzantine coins, an ancient ring with an inscription, intact lamps and gold jewelry in a trash pit from the Byzantine period in Israel.
It remains a mystery why the valuable items were discarded hundreds of years ago, scientists said.
Numerous finds dating to the Late Byzantine period (fifth, sixth and seventh centuries AD) were discovered in excavations conducted in the agricultural hinterland of the ancient city of Apollonia-Arsuf, just north of Tel Aviv.
Among the finds uncovered are installations for processing the agricultural produce such as wine presses, and what also might be the remains of an olive press, as well as remains of walls that were apparently part of the ancillary buildings that were meant to serve local farmers, according to an Israel Antiquities Authority statement.
Archaeologists also found more than four hundred coins which are mostly Byzantine, including one gold coin, as well as two hundred whole and intact Samaritan lamps (among them lamps that were never used), rings and gold jewelry.
Apollonia was inhabited continuously for more than 1,500 years - from the Persian period (late sixth century BC) until the end of the Crusader period (thirteenth century AD).
