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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Sodom. Sort by date Show all posts

Jun 20, 2022

Sodom Sulfur Ball Video


Recently a video by Joel P. Kramer about "Sulfur Balls of Sodom and Gomorrah" was posted at Epic Archaeology (Facebook) by Ted Wright who subsequently removed my posts challenging his claim that Bab edh-Dhra was Sodom. So I thought it appropriate to provide context for readers and those interested in Sodom research. NOTE: that I deal with all this in detail with academic references in my book The Location of Sodom . I will repeat some of this research here.

My Interest in Sodom


Video Introduction

 

For those who may not know there are two views among conservative Christians for the Location of Sodom. The Southern Sodom Theory (SST) promoted by Dr. Bryant Wood, retired director of ABR, and the Northern Sodom Theory (NST) promoted by Dr. Steven Collins, Trinity Southwest University and Veritas International University. In the larger debate over minimalist VS maximalist, they are both maximalist and friends, but differ over their archaeological conclusions. I was mentored by Dr. Bryant Wood in the late 1970's when studying Archaeology at Tyndale University in Ontario Canada when Dr. Wood was studying archaeology at the University of Toronto. At the time, I wrote a paper on Sodom and Gomorrah for my course and Dr Wood was most helpful and gracious in sharing his articles in Bible and Spade magazine (Associated for Biblical Research) about his belief that Bab eh-Dhra (BeD) was Sodom. I got an A- on my paper thanks to his mentor-ship. 

Then the year I was to excavate with Dr. Wood at Khirbet el-Maqatir (2005), the excavation was canceled due to conflicts in the region, and discovered that some of my friends were excavating at Tall el-Hammam in Jordan instead, so I signed up, not knowing at the time that it was a candidate for Sodom. Following 10 of the 15 seasons excavating at Hammam I changed my mind on the location of Sodom based on the overwhelming archaeological evidence, that Tall el-Hammam is Sodom and that the Cities of the Plain are indeed on the North End of the Dead Sea based on the biblical text. The key factor is the date of the destruction and date of the Patriarchs that I did not fully understand as a undergraduate, having just begin my archaeology career. So hearing both sides of the debate, I began on a quest to research the actual data published on all the sites and not just accept the claims of Dr. Wood and Dr. Collins, whom I deeply respect. I was also teaching a course at Liberty University on Biblical Archaeology and required students to write a paper comparing the arguments for both sites, and began seeing students embrace arguments not supported by the evidence (common when people do their research on the internet). As a result I wrote my book on the Location of Sodom to present the facts as they are published and known. I also wrote several peer reviewed articles on Tall el-Hammam.

My Critique of the Kramer "Sulfur Balls" video

Things in common with Kramer

First, there a many things that Joel P. Kramer and I share in common.

  1. We are both Christian archaeologists.
  2. We both believe the biblical account is historically true (maximalists). 
  3. We have both worked at Khirbet el-Maqatir.
  4. We are both on the staff of ABR with many common friends on staff.
  5. We both know Dr. Bryant Wood.
  6. We have both published in Bible and Spade magazine.
  7. We have both worked in archaeology in Jordan.
  8. We both know Dr. Shimon Gibson. 
  9. We both have taken Christians on tours of Jordan and Israel. 
  10. We share a passion for good graphics.

So, I am here on my blog not to "bash" Joel Kramer, but to honestly, objectively, and scientifically examine his claims and conclusions without malice in the spirit of good scholarship (not something to easily reflect on FB or Twitter).

False or Misleading Conclusions made in the Video

Now let us examine the claims that Mr. Kramer make in his well photographed video. And I honestly mean this, the video is well done cinematography. This is his specialty and gives a good visual of the sites of Bab edh-Dhra and Numeira. However, a good video does not mean that the conclusions are good. The video is filled with inaccurate information and misleading conclusions. Let me explain.

Claims Patriarchs lived in the EBA.

This is perhaps the most important claim that destroys the claim of BeD being Sodom. Kramer claims that Abraham and Lot lived in the "Early Bronze Age" (EBA 3300-2100 BC). However, he does not provide any dates or justification to verify his claim (he make a case for the problems with the carbon dating in his interview). According to the published material made by Rast and Schaub, who excavated Bâb edh-Dhrâ, the destruction date of Bab edh-Dhra is ca. 2350 BC [1]  and Numeria is 2000 BC and that is based on the pottery and carbon 14 dating of organic material. So there is no argument that BeD was destroyed in the EBA (2350 BC in his interview he cherry picks the earlier dates of Albright and Pratt but Albright did not excavate the site and Pratt was the preliminary work done there before Rast and Schaub), however, the question is when did Abraham and Lot (Patriarchs) live?

This needs to be expanded for the layman. All Christian scholar, including Dr. Wood (whom Kramer is supporting and I respect), believe that the patriarchs lived in the Middle Bronze Age 2166–1991 BC (MB I or called Intermediate Bronze, Wood's dates). Wood claims that the date for the destruction of Sodom is ca. 2070 BC based on a 1446 BC date for the Exodus which places it in the Middle Bronze age not the Early Bronze Age.[2]  Note that this is a 220 year difference from the date of the Patriarchs and destruction of BeD which Dr. Wood acknowledges, while Kramer does not.

Note that Christian scholars debate the date of the Patriarchs, but very few serious scholars argue that they lived in the EBA (3300-2100 BC). For details see my previous post on the Date of the Patriarchs. where I lay out the charts of each scholar and their dates. This does not mean that the biblical account is not true, but that the evidence is blurry this early in human history and cannot be claimed as a fact but debated, which is OK in the quest for the truth. The fact that each conservative scholar have their own dates for these early periods proves that this is not a settled fact. The Bible does not give exact dates and must be calculated from clues in the text, thus the various dates.

Point is that most Christian archaeologists (including Dr. Wood) believe that the Patriarchs lived in the Middle Bronze age (2166-1991 BC) not the Early Bronze Age (3300-2100 BC). Note: that each scholar has a slightly different date by 50-100 years because of the uncertainty of the dates that are not absolute, but relatively subjective. So lets agree that the Patriarchs lived in the Middle Bronze age based on the cultural indicators in the biblical text compared with cultural indicators in ancient texts (Ebla, Mari, etc).

Claims that Rast and Schaub believed it was Sodom

Kramer reads from Rast and Schaub giving the impression that they believed that Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ is Sodom. However, Lapp, Schaub, and Rast have never affirmed that Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ is biblical Sodom in the same historical sense as Wood or other Christians (including Kramer or I) believe. They believed that the destruction of these southern cities laid the foundation for the stories found in the Bible.They would say the same thing about Tall el-Hammam bring Sodom.

The Location of Sodom : FACT 6: RAST AND SCHAUB DID NOT BELIEVE THAT BED WAS SODOM Rast, who excavated BeD, in fact believed that:

Sodom was a fictional place name to begin with, that a city by this name never existed, and that the name came into being as an element in a local story or tale stressing a destruction severe enough to account for the startling physiography of the Dead Sea region.[3]

I am standing at the other end of this charnel
house (grave house) at Bab edh-Dhra.

Burn layer over graves in a cemetery

No doubt that there is a large cemetery at Bab edh-Dhra, and that some of it was burned. My issue is how he treats the evidence or does not mention the facts.

First, there are different periods to the cemetery and different types of graves. There are shaft tombs that date to an earlier period (EB IA)[7] and charnel "mudbrick" houses (see the photo where I am standing at one end) that date to the same destruction as the city complex (EB III). Charnel houses looks like a house/residence (explains why they were possibly burned by an enemy, with burning arrows landing on the roof) where they placed many bodies once they had decomposed. There have been many scientific reports done on the cemetery at Bab edh-Dhra (all referenced in my book). Also, note that the large number of bodies (half million) in the cemetery does not support the size of the city and so the theory has been published that the Bedouin brought their dead there to bury their relatives. If this was Sodom the bodies would have been in the debris of the city structures and not the cemetery. Note: charred human remains at BeD were only found in the cemetery and not the city. [8] No human remains were reported in the archaeological reports for the residence of Bab edh-Dhra.

Kramer posits the question "why would armies burn the cemetery". The answer is quite simple, because they looked like residential houses. The assyrians had come through the region and attacked the cities in around the Dead Sea (Chedorlaomer or Kedorlaomer, king of Elam Gen 14:10).

Bones in the surface finds 

Now there is no doubt that Kramer picked up bones from the ground at BeD, but the question is where were they actually excavated. Rast and Schaub document that it was only in the cemetery. Finding bones on the surface of the ground walking around does not mean anythings. Local dog (lots of them around when I was there) could have dug them up and brought them to the surface and moved them around the site. As an archaeologist, Kramer should know that these finds need to be documented in-situ (he even used this term in his video so he is familiar with the concept). So lets look at the actual published excavation reports. Rast and Schaub certainly documented human remains in the cemetery, but none in the city EB destruction layer. It is certainly consistent to find bones in a cemetery.

At the final destruction of Numeira Coogan reports that: “No human skeletal remains were found in the ashy debris of the final destruction in the center of town.”[5] Human remains were reported in the city tower at Numeira but remember this was a different time than BeD's destruction.

Assumes that Bab edh-Dhra and Numeira were destroyed at the same time

False: Kramer does not mention the dates for the destruction of BeD or Numeira, but just assumes that the two sites were destroyed at the same time, but they were not. Bab edh-Dhra and Numeira were destroyed 250 years apart according to the men who excavated both sites.

The Location of Sodom : FACT 39: BED AND NUMEIRA WERE DESTROYED AT DIFFERENT TIMES Here you will find all the details and footnotes to verify this statement.

If one is Sodom the other certainly cannot be Gomorrah unless we have more than one accounts in scripture.

Shadows and Mirrors: Numeira was never resettled

True: Kramer claims that Numeira was never lived in again. What he does NOT tell you is that Bab edh-Dhra was destroyed in the EB III and then reoccupied in EB IV. See the Location of Sodom : FACT 38: BED WAS DESTROYED IN THE EB III BUT WAS REOCCUPIED IN EB IV

 Claims Sulfur ball sank in the Dead Sea

"Sinking down in the Dead Sea and preserved" Makes no sense. Also he claims in his interview with McDowell that they are "unique to the Dead Sea". This is just wrong.

Sulfur balls are created by the combination of salt water and Gypsum (and other minerals) from the Dead Sea but many other places on earth. 

Besides those geological settings, native sulfur balls have also been discovered in a unique occurrence of supraglacial sulfur springs in the eastern Krieger Mountains, on Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canadian High Arctica. Native sulfur balls appears as rounded concretions in many areas, for example Mt. Ruapehu in New Zealand (Giggenbach, 1974); Kusatsu-Shirane Volcano in Yugama crater lake, Japan (Takano and Watanuki, 1990); Poa´s Volcano in central Costa Rica (Rowe et al., 1992a); Keli Mutu crater lakes in Flores, Indonesia (Pasternack and Varekamp, 1994); and Massada near the Dead Sea (Torfstein et al., 2008). The native sulfur ball is formed during the mixing of acidic hydrothermal fluid (which includes H2S and SO2 gases) and seawater. [10]

Pointing to sulfur balls in the walls around the Dead Sea that is not dated is just poor science. You need to date it with pottery or some other means (i.e. C14).  The existence of sulfur ball which occur around the world proves nothing. It is commonly used by the Pseudo-archaeologist Ron Wyatt, and am sure you do not want to be counted in his camp, who used sulfur ball to argue it is around Mt. Sidom/Masada on the other side of the Dead Sea in Israel.

Claims the Bible say "sulfur rained"

The Bible describes it as:  "Then the Lord rained on Sodom and Gomorrah brimstone (Heb gā-p̄ə-rît ) and fire from the Lord out of heaven, and He overthrew those cities, and all the valley, and all the inhabitants of the cities, and what grew on the ground.." Gen 19:24-25 NASB

The text in Hebrew uses the word gā-p̄ə-rît (NAS, KJV, INT) and fire. Strong's Concordance translates it as brimstone. Brown-Driver-Briggs (BDB) describes it as Pitch and then other combustibles, especially sulphur (from Bactrian vohukereti). 
 
To find sulfur balls around the Dead Sea is common due to the production of the balls from the geology of the regions (salt water and other minerals).

No scientific or archaeological research is mentioned other than Rast and Schaub who did not believe it was historical Sodom

Alternative explanation that fits the archaeology and geology

What is noteworthy is that the entire Jordan Valley including Tall el-Hammam was destroyed by an air burst in the middle bronze age (BeD had already been destroyed) according to secular archaeological scholars (who have no horse in the race for Sodom) and called the absence of occupation in the Jordan Valley as "the Late Bronze gap".[6]  An air burst that has been scientifically proven to be the destruction of the Jordan Valley in the Middle Bronze Age (secular archaeologist call it the late bronze gap). [7] NOTE: I do not see this as an explaining away the biblical account as naturally occurring, but that God uses his creation (means) to bring about his purposes.

 An air burst would have also sprayed salt (documented from sample taken after the MB destruction at TeH had toxic levels of salt)[11] and even perhaps sulfur balls around the Dead Sea region.

Interview by Kramer on Bab edh-Dhra as Sodom

His interview with Sean McDowell is filled with facts but also fiction. He just regergitates the material that Dr. Bryant Wood proposed in the late 1970's. I know because Dr. Wood was my mentor for my paper on Sodom and Gomorah, in 1979. Note that there is no mention that Tall el-Hammam, Jordan (North End of Dead Sea) was excavated in the last 15 years which has also been argued strongly as Sodom (See The Handbook of the Holy Land). One does not need to agree that TeH is Sodom but at least mention it as a candidate by other Christian archaeologists.

Site plan for the EBI and IAII remains at Feifa (or Fifa).
Used with permission of Hugh Barnes, The Follow the Pots Project
.

Excavation of Feifa

Kramer's claims that Feifa, discovered in 1973, has never been excavated, which is wrong. So what do we know?

Feifa (also Fifa, Feifeh, or Fifah) was excavated by Walter E. Rast and R. Thomas Schaub in Dec 1989- Jan 1990.[9]

Excavated again in 2001 by Dr. Mohammed Najjar, department of Antiquities, Jordan in the second salvage season. Najjar spent 2 weeks and excavated about 50 tombs.

The profile of the site is Neolithic,  EB IA cemetery,[12]  IAII fortress built over the EB cemetery.  Town site initially identified as EB but is actually IAII,[13] Nabatean, Roman, Byzantine,  & Mamluk. Van Hattem’s indication of EB III is mistaken.[14]

It was found that there were no EB III/IV (3000–2350 BC) residential structures at Feifa, but only IA1 (1200–1000 BC much later) structures. If Feifa is one of the cities of the plain it must have been destroyed at the same time as Bab edh-Dhra around 2350 BC (EB III). So Kramer is claiming that one of the cities of the plain which was merely a cemetery with no occupation, is one of the cities of the plain. The Bible describes destruction that would place bodies from that time period in the destruction layer (published archaeology and not surface finds), not in cemeteries, and certainly not in a city that did not exist at this time period.

Khirbet al-Kanazar 

Khirbet al-Kanazar was discovered in 1973 by MacDonald and identified as site 141 in the survey of the southern Ghor. Burton MacDonald and Nancy Lapp. It was excavated in Dec 1989- Jan 1990 by Walter E. Rast and R. Thomas Schaub. Then again by Meredith S.Chesson,  The profile of Khirbet al-Kanazar is EB I cemetery,[15]  EB IV cemetery with no domestic occupation.  IA , IA II , Rom.  Van Hattem’s claimed that there was EB III remains but this was mistaken. The walls which Rast and Schaub identified in 1973[16] were in reality charnel houses marking EB IV shaft tombs. [17]

Initially Dr. Bryant Wood claimed that Kanazar was Sodom.[20] In his later article Dr. Bryant Wood, whom Kramer is following, acknowledges that the evidence at Khanazir and Feifa (excavated between 16 December 1989 and 13 January 1990) revealed no identifiable settlements, with ONLY the cemetery evident. Wood states “At Khanazir, walls observed by Rast and Schaub in 1973 were in reality rectangular structures marking Early Bronze IV shaft tombs.”[21]  Wood changed his opinion on Khanazir to connect it with either Zeboiim or Admah, and identified Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ and Numeira as Sodom and Gomorrah. However, the evidence does not follow as the site is merely a cemetery as he acknowldges in his report.

BeD was resettled after its destruction in EB IV.

Kramer claims that Sodom was never resettled based on (Jeremiah 50:39–40). Assuming that this is true, which one does not need to hold from the reading of the text (other cities were cursed and then resettled in the future), then BeD cannot be Sodom, because it was resettled in the EBIV period after its destruction in 2350 BC (EBIII).

Initially, in 1981, Rast and Schaub thought that “the EB IV peoples chose areas away from the town for settlement” [22]  following the destruction of BeD at the end of the EBIII period.  But new evidence, reported in their 1981 excavation reports, overturned this belief:

A number of pits cut in the area also belonged to the EBIV settlement. This is the first clear evidence within the city of an EBIV usage following the destruction in EBIII necessitating a change in the previous view.  Several excellent groups of EBIV pottery came from these loci. [26]

This is no small point based on Kramers argument that Sodom must be destroyed never to be occupied and BeD does not meet his own criteria. So if he must hold to  his argument that it must never have been reoccuped then this clearly rules out BeD.

Bab edh-Dhra is not the established site for Sodom

Wrong. Only Dr. Bryant Wood and a few folk at ABR (where I am also on staff) claim that BeD is Sodom (see Eric Cline quote at the bottom of this post). Albright who discovered the site of Bab edh-Dhra did not believe it was Sodom because it dated to the EB period (knew this even before it was confirmed by excavations from surface finds) and he knew that the Patriarchs lived in the Middle Bronze period. It was the best candidate for Sodom prior to the excavation of TeH which is a much stronger condidate becasue it was destroyed in the MB period when the patriarchs lived.

The view that Bab edh-Dhra is Sodom was put forth by Dr. Bryant Woods in the 1970's and I was mentored by him at the time in Toronto while writing my paper on Sodom and Gomorah in my undergrad archaeology course and believed at the time that it was Sodom for many of the same reason that Kramer uses. Upon further investigation and the excavations at Tall el-Hammam I have changed my mind based on the strong evidence.

Es-Safi (his Zoar) is right in the middle of the other cities

That the cemetery at es-Safi (his Zoar) after its destruction continues to be used while the other cemteries are not is not true from the archaeological evidence.

Furthermore the location of Zoar has been debated and none have been confirmed as Zoar from the archaeological remains.
 

These sites for Citise of the Plain are not debated by scholars: wrong

Just plain wrong and this post and many many other scholars claim that Tall el-Hammam is a candidate (at least) for Sodom. So to say that there is not debate by scholars is not only wrong but flat out a lie that misleads the public and especially Christians. And I know that Kramer knows about Tall el-Hammam because we have published in the same magazine and belong to the same organization, ABR.

BeD is the largest site in the southern Dead Sea

Yes, but not in the Jordan valley. Even in the EB period Tall el-Hammam is 62 Acres, while BeD is only 10. In the MB period TeH is still 62 acres but BeD is non-existent.The TeH is destroyed along with all the cities in the Jordan Valley. Secular archaologists call it the "Late Bronze Gap." The air burst event has been scientifaclly documented as the cause of the destruction of the cities in the Jordan Valley, and may also explain the destruction of the cemeteries from containing EB bodies in the southern region of the Dead Sea (BeD, Feifa, Kanazar and even Ex-Safi).

Tall el-Hammam (candidate for Sodm) from Mt Nebo.

Zoar on the Madaba map 

First,  the Madaba map dates to the 6th cent. AD (AD 542 - 570) which is Byzantine tradition and Egeria (Spanish Pilgrim AD 381–84) who predates the Madaba map by almost 200 years traveled through the region and spoke to the Bishop of Sodom to then climb Mt Nebo where she describes seeing "The Land of the Sodomites" from that location.  Egeria, The Pilgrimage of Etheria, 20, 23–24.

What is indisputable is that the southern end of the Dead Sea is not visible from Mt. Nebo. One can only see the top end of the Dead Sea and Tall el-Hammam from this location.

I have published that Tall el-Hammam is represented on the Madaba Map and while in the Byzantine period it would have been identified as Livias, however, the name that was eroded on the map may well have read Sodom as it was a map of holy sites and Livias was not a holy site, and Egeria acknowleged a Bishop of Sodom.

Critique of Tall el-Hammam

He does not mention this site in his video but in the interview he does mention it. His concerns are:

 He said the they would have gone into these sites and excavated them if they were believed to be Sodom, Well Tall el-Hammam was mined and Kay Prag could only do a small square there until it was demined and Dr. Steven Collins could safely excavate it from 2005 until today 2022.

Then he claims that Tall el-Hammam cannot be Sodom because Sodom is south of Jerusalem (a prophetic text that is not narrative to give georgraphy and ignores the key passage that say it was east of Bethel and Ai and on the Kikkar (Heb Jordan Valley), which it is impossible to see the southern end of the Dead Sea from between Bethel and Ai.

He also claims that Tall el-Hammam cannot be Sodom and Abel-Shittim. Why not they are in different periods and in the time of Moses (LBA) it was a wasteland when Moses came through because it had been destroyed in the MBA.

"disqualified from the Bible" Well if you read the test of Gen 10:19; 13:3, 10-12; 14:1-12; Deut 29:22-24;  34:1-3 they all indicate that Sodom was on the north end (Heb Kikkar Jordan valley) of the Dead Sea which many Christian archaeologists and scholars believed before Albright (who did not believe Bab edh-drah was Sodom). 

Reconstruction based on the archaeology.
 "They have excavated a Late Bronze building." and "Iron Age Palace" There was a very small Late Bronze building on the acropolis (perhaps a watch tower) but no residential structures when Moses was there with the people of Israel. There was an Iron Age City from the time of Solomon, correct. But what he fails to mention or misrepresent is that we have excavated a very large Middle Bronze age Palace and city gate that was destroyed and evidenct throughout the city in every square at this time period (MBA the time of the Patriarchs). The research is published in many places.

I and Dr. Scott Stripling personally excavated the Roman bath complex at Tall el-Hammam and his statement is accurate that there is a huge Roman city called Livias. But then draws the conclusion that "You cannot have a Roman city when Jesus is saying your going to become like Sodom and Gomorah." Well what is significant is that Jesus is on the Jordan side (Perea) near Tall el-Hammam when he made the statement and they would have understood the significance of that statement. It was no longer Sodom but Livias had been built on the ruins and that is what made the statement so powerful for those listening. Publication

"In the past they would have taken you to these sites" (South end of the Dead Sea). False.These archaeologist would place it on the North end and some even at Tall elHammam. Charles William Wilson (1869);  Edward Henry Palmer (1871); Henry Baker Tristram (1873); Selah Merrill (1876, 1881); William F. Birch (1879); Claude Reignier Conder (1879–1883); William M. Thomson (1882–85); George Grove (1884); John Cunningham Geikie (1887); Père Alexis Mallon (1929–1934); and E. Power (1930). They are all quoted and referenced in The Location of Sodom.

Dating

Kramer claims that Albright dates BeD to 2067 BC for the destruction of BeD, The problem is that Albright does not believe that this site is Sodom because it is to early for the time of the Patriarchs. Then Kramer claims that Lapp dated the destruction of BeD to 2100 BC. Then Kramer claims that because Carbon dating is not accurate that the dates of Rast and Schaub (does not say but it is 2350 BC) are not valid. He just picks the dates that suits his narrative. Now all must agree that carbon dating must be calibrated and that it can be off but not 350 years. I have personally seen the pottery at the Bab edh-Dhra cemetery as well as the pottery in the British museum from the site and there is no doubt that it is EBA (ca. 3100–2350 BC) and confirmed by the carbon dating.

Wood claims that the date for the destruction of Sodom (BeD) is ca. 2070 BC based on a 1446 BC date for the Exodus.[27] The date of the destruction of Bab edh-Dhra according to Rast and Schaub is 2350 BC based on the pottery and the carbon 14 dating.

 “toward the end of the Early Bronze Age–Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ in 2350 BC. But Numeira was simply abandoned about 2600 BC.” So even if one is Sodom the other cannot be Gomorrah.

Rast points out that:

Although it is difficult to determine the exact time span of Early Bronze III Bab edh-Dhra, the fact that it had five major building phases would suggest that it lasted over a period of between 300 and 400 years, from ca. 2750 to 2350 B.C. Rast, “Bronze Age Cities along the Dead Sea,” 47.

Albright stated that Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ may be one of the “clues or links” which could help to identify the Cities of the Plain, but did not believe that it was Sodom. In Albright’s own words he stated: “It therefore seems highly probable that Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ is a link to the biblical Sodom and Gomorrah. . . . ” (Running and Freedman, William Foxwell Albright: A Twentieth-Century Genius: A Biography of the Acknowledged Dean of Biblical Archaeologists, 119.) but this is not saying that BeD is Sodom. Albright believed that Sodom was in the southern region but now buried under the Dead Sea. Albright stated:

one result of our expedition has been to demonstrate that the site of the Old Testament Zoar was submerged by the rise of the Sea, . . . There is, accordingly, little likelihood that the exact sites of the original Zoar, of Sodom, or of Gomorrah will ever be recovered, but we can probably locate these towns approximately. . . . Since Zoar controlled the Seil el-Qrahi, Sodom, which biblical tradition places next to Zoar, presumably lay on the Seil en-Nmeirah, while Gomorrah may have been in the oasis of the Seil ‘Esal. There is no room here for Admah and Zeboim, which, though allied with Sodom and Gomorrah, were probably situated in the southern part of the Jordan Valley, east of the river, where an Adamah (so, with the same consonants), now Tell ed-Damieh. (Albright, “The Archæological Results of an Expedition to Moab and the Dead Sea,” 8).

Albright believed that Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ could not be Sodom because it was destroyed in the EBA.
Albright, “The Jordan Valley in the Bronze Age,” 59.

 Conclusion

As an archaeologist Kramer has demonstrated very sloppy, if not misleading claims in his video and would encourage him to sharpen his academic skills and research. In an attempt to defend the historical accuracy of the biblical text (which I appreciate) it deserves more accuracy and a fair treatment of the evidence ( even if one does not agree that TeH is Sodom it should at least be mentioned as a serious candidate proposed by other Christian archaeologists). I appreciate his passion and goals, because I share them, but it needs to be based on accurate research and not just a conservative ideological observation of surface finds.

In my excavations and research, Tall el-Hammam is in the right place (Kikkar, or Jordan Valley), with the right stuff (archaeology destruction in MB), at right time (middle Bronze Age destruction), and with the right event (air burst in MB period).  

If Kramer had consulted the academic material in my book The Location of Sodomh or even the published dig reports material and represented them accuartely he would have seen that most of his claims that Bab edh-Dhra is Sodom were not supported by the evidence. He can disagree with Tall el-Hammam being Sodom which is fine, but he cannot claim that Bab edh-Dhra is Sodom based on the archaeological evidence, it just does not support his claim even with the manipulation of the evidence.

Let me conclude with this quote from Eric Cline who is currently the Chair of the Department of Classical and Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations and Director of the Capitol Archaeological Institute at The George Washington University. As Eric Cline recently admitted in his chapter on “Sodom and Gomorrah”, after assessing the current state of the “southern” evidence:

[There] is no longer any particular reason to insist that Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ and Numeira are definitely Sodom and Gomorrah, especially if we wish to have Abraham both as an eyewitness and living in the Middle Bronze Age.. . . . Perhaps it would be wise to untether Sodom and Gomorrah from Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ and Numeira and search elsewhere for them. But where? [Now there is 15 seasons of excavation at Tall el-Hammam and three other cities around TeH that fit the criteria of the right place, right time, right stuff and right event]. Eric H. Cline, From Eden to Exile: Unraveling Mysteries of the Bible (Tampa, Fla.: National Geographic, 2007), 59–60.

_________________

Footnotes

1. Schaub, “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ (OEANE),” 1: 249; “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ (The New Encyclopedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land),” 1:135–36; Rast, “Bronze Age Cities along the Dead Sea,” 48; “Patterns of Settlement at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ,” 17, 31–34; Chesson, “Libraries of the Dead,” 143 n.1; Rast, “Bronze Age Cities along the Dead Sea,” 47; “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ (Anchor Bible Dictionary),” 1:560; “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ and the Origin of the Sodom Saga,” 194; Chesson and Schaub, “Life in the Earliest Walled Towns,” 247.

2. Wood, “Discovery of the Sin Cities,” 78; “Locating Sodom: A Critique of the Northern Proposal,” 81. Some SST supporters (Freedman and van Hattem) maintain an early date of 2650–2300 BC for the existence of the Patriarchs (including Abraham and Lot) which corresponds with the EB III destruction of Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ (see Fact 37, 38 and Chart 4). However, Wood, who holds to BeD as Sodom, that saw its major destruction in 2350 BC, argues that the Patriarchs lived around 2166–1991 BC (MB I or Intermediate Bronze). For those like Albright, Kitchen, and Collins who take a later Middle Bronze (MB 1950–1550 BC) Age date for the Patriarchs (see Fact 38 and Chart 4), BeD does not exist when Abraham and Lot lived.

3.  Rast, “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ (Anchor Bible Dictionary),” 1:561.

5. Michael David Coogan. “Numeira 1981.” BASOR 255 (Summer 1984): 81.

6. James W. Flanagan, David W. McCreery, and Khair N. Yassine, “Tell Nimrin: Preliminary Report on the 1993 Season,” ADAJ 38 (1994): 207.

7. The 20,000 shaft tombs were estimated to account for over half a million bodies. Paul W. Lapp, “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” Revue Biblique 73 (1966): 556–61; aul W.  Lapp, “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ Tomb A 76 and Early Bronze I in Palestine.” BASOR 189 (1968): 12–41; Paul W.  Lapp, “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” Revue Biblique 73 (1966): 556–61.

8. Donald J Ortner, “A Preliminary Report on the Human Remains from the Bab Edh-Dhra’ Cemetery,” in The Southeastern Dead Sea Plain Expedition: An Interim Report of the 1977 Season, ed. R. Thomas Schaub and Walter E. Rast, AASOR 46 (Boston, MA: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1979), 119–32; Rast, “The Southeastern Dead Sea Valley Expedition, 1979.” Biblical Archaeologist 43, no. 1 (1980): 60–61.

9. Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations at the Town Site (1975-1981), 15.

10. A. Torfsteinab; I. Gavrielib; A. Katza; Y. Kolodnya; M. Steinb. "Gypsum as a monitor of the paleo-limnological–hydrological conditions in Lake Lisan and the Dead Sea" Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta Volume 72, Issue 10, 15 May 2008, Pages 2491-2509; Torfstein, Adi, Ittai Gavrieli, and Mordechai Stein. “The Sources and Evolution of Sulfur in the Hypersaline Lake Lisan (paleo-Dead Sea).” Earth and Planetary Science Letters 236 (2005): 61–77.

11.  David E. Graves, ‘Sodom And Salt in Their Ancient Near Eastern Cultural Context’, Near East Archaeological Society Bulletin 61, no. 1 (2): 18–36.

12.  Rast and Schaub, “Survey of the Southeastern Plain of the Dead Sea, 1973,” 11–12, 17; “The 1975-1981 Excavations at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ,” 1; MacDonald, “Southern Ghors and Northeast ’Arabah (The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East),” 65.

13. Schaub, “Southeast Dead Sea Plain,” 63; Rast and Schaub, “Survey of the Southeastern Plain of the Dead Sea, 1973,” 11.

14. Hattem, “Once Again,” 88.

15.  Rast, “The 1975-1981 Excavations at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ,” 1.

17.  Rast and Schaub, “Survey of the Southeastern Plain of the Dead Sea, 1973,” 12–14.

18. de Vries, “Archaeology in Jordan, 1991,” 262; Rast, “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ (Anchor Bible Dictionary),” 560; MacDonald et al., “Southern Ghors and Northeast `Arabah Archaeological Survey 1986,” 406; Schaub, “Southeast Dead Sea Plain,” 62.

20. Wood, “Discovery of the Sin Cities,” 69.

21. Wood, “Discovery of the Sin Cities,” 69.

22. Walter E. Rast and R. Thomas Schaub, “A Preliminary Report of Excavations at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ, 1975,” in Preliminary Excavation Reports: Bab Edh-Dhrac, Sardis, Meiron, Tell El-Hesi, Carthage (Punic), ed. David Noel Freedman, AASOR 43 (Chicago, Ill.: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1978), 14.

26.  Walter E. Rast, “Patterns of Settlement at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” In The Southeastern Dead Sea Plain Expedition: An Interim Report of the 1977 Season, edited by R. Thomas Schaub and Walter E. Rast, 7–34. AASOR 46. Boston: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1979. 17.

27. Wood, “Discovery of the Sin Cities,” 78; “Locating Sodom: A Critique of the Northern Proposal,” 81.  

For a survey of the literature on the Cities in the Southern Dead Seas area see LINK

The full research and footnotes can be found in The Location of Sodom .

 Bible Interact Podcasts

Podcast Interview on Sodom and Salt Part 1 September 2023

Sodom and Salt Part 2 September 2023

___________

Further Research

David E. Graves, “Sodom And Salt in Their Ancient Near Eastern Cultural Context,” Near East Archaeological Society Bulletin 61 (2016): 18–36.

For the historic publication of the Scientific Reports in a peer reviewed publication see my PostBunch, T. E., LeCompte, M.A., Adedeji, A.V. et al. "A Tunguska sized airburst destroyed Tall el-Hammam a Middle Bronze Age city in the Jordan Valley near the Dead Sea." Scientific Reports 11, no 1 18632 (2021), 1-64.  Online article link


For my response to Gordon Govier's article in Christianity Today see my blog post.


Sodom Research Blog to related articles and links

 

_________

 
Updated Feb, 2024
 
Modified Oct 23, 2023

Jun 16, 2014

Sodom Research

Sodom Research

Biblical Archaeology

These tips will help you research the Location of Sodom.

Useful to print for future reference on Sodom.

Index

TIPS TO CONSIDER

FACTS TO CONSIDER
8 facts from Key Fact for the Location of Sodom

  1. The NST is not a new theory, FACT 3
  2. Few sites have ever been identified using an inscription, FACT 11
  3. Both sites are located in the Great Rift Valley, FACT 25
  4. Most scholars place the date of the Patriarchs in the MBA, FACT 37
  5. Numeira was destroyed 250 years before BeD, FACT 39
  6. Use of flaming arrows for battle, FACT 54
  7. This century the Dead Sea is at its lowest point in history, FACT 56
  8. Bitumen pits Location of the battle, FACT 57
RESOURCES

Tips to Consider

  1. These books would be highly recommended for background material and sources, including maps, charts, and timelines, for your Sodom Papers. The advantage of such a book is that it provides a collective source of material for students that would otherwise take a long time to assemble or otherwise be inaccessible. Numerous detailed maps, charts, tables, and photographs are included which will help facilitate understanding of the unfamiliar terrain of the Dead Sea and Jordan Valley. A glossary defines technical terms, and extensive footnotes, a bibliography, and reference to a large index of subjects and authors provides an invaluable resource to students for future study. Index
  2. Don't retell the Sodom Story: Don't spend time in your introduction retelling the Sodom story or quoting from large sections of Genesis. We all know the story and for such a short paper start with a good thesis statement about your task. Index
  3. New Research: There is new research on the subject of Sodom in recent years. Many works on archaeology are out of date on the subject. (See LINK for the up-to-date material). The “Sodom and Gomorrah paper” is designed to evaluate some of this new research on the location of Sodom. Index
  4. Two Separate Sites: Sodom and Gomorrah have traditionally been named together, although they are two separate sites, however you are just researching Sodom, although it would be good to name the site that each side understands to be Gomorrah. Index
  5. Destruction: In describing the destruction for each site we are not interested in how they were destroyed (earthquake, volcano, thunder, asteroid, etc.), but rather in the evidence that is left behind. Is there evidence of burning, high temperatures, bodies, pottery left behind, etc.? Index
  6. Maps: Be sure to use a good map for the location of Bab edh-Dhra and Tall el-Hammam. There are several maps in the Key Facts for the Location of Sodom. Looking from the surrounding mountains one would be looking down into the Jordan Valley like looking into the Grand Canyon. Picture of Jordan Valley from Mt. Nebo (can you see the southern end of the Dead Sea?) Index
  7. Some Journal articles are not available from this blog, but may be accessed through your university Library.

Facts to Consider in your Sodom Papers

Please print and keep these handy while you write your Sodom Paper.

These will have implication for your arguments during the comparison of the northern and southern locations for Sodom. There are 62 facts in the book The Location of Sodom: Navigating the Maze of Arguments, 2016 that would be helpful to consult. Here is the outline of the book with the fact that would be helpful while you write your paper.

Abbreviations:
SST = Southern Sodom Theory
NST = Northern Sodom Theory
TeH = Tall el-Hammam
BeD = Bab edh-Dhra
ANE = Ancient Near East
EBA = Early Bronze Age
MB = Middle Bronze

  1. CHAPTER THREE – PRELIMINARY FACTS  page 56
    • FACT 1: SODOM IS NOT A FICTION FOR WOOD AND COLLINS. page 56
    • FACT 2: THE SST IS NOT A NEW VIEW. page 57
    • FACT 3: THE NST IS NOT A NEW VIEW. page 58. The northern location for Sodom in the Jordan Valley is not a new theory: It was argued by most archaeologists prior to W. F. Albright.
      •  Charles W. Wilson, “On the Site of Ai and the Position of the Altar Which Abram Built Between Bethel and Ai.” Palestine Exploration Fund: Quarterly Statement 1, no. 4 (1869): 123-26. Edward H. Palmer, The Desert of the Exodus: Journeys on Foot in the Wilderness of the Forty Years’ of Wanderings Undertaken in Connexion with the Ordance Survey of Sinai and the Palestine Exploration Fund (Vol. 2. 2 vols. Cambridge, U.K.: Deighton, Bell & Co., 1871), 2:480.
      • Henry Baker Tristram, The Land of Moab Travels and Discoveries on the East Side of the Dead Sea and the Jordan, 2nd ed. (Piscataway, N.J.: Gorgias, 1874), 326–33. LINK
      • Selah Merrill, East of the Jordan: A Record of Travel and Observation in the Countries of Moab, Gilead, and Bashan (London, U.K.: Darf, 1881), 239.
      • Selah Merrill, “Modern Researches in Palestine.” Journal of the American Geographical Society of New York 9 (1877): 109–25.
      • Selah Merrill “Modern Researches in Palestine.” Palestine Exploration Fund: Quarterly Statement 11, no. 1 (1879): 138–54.
      • William F. Birch, “Zoar.” Palestine Exploration Fund: Quarterly Statement 11, no. 1 (1879): 15–18, 99–101.
      • William F. Birch, “Sodom.” Palestine Exploration Fund: Quarterly Statement 13 (1881): 101–102.
      • Claude Reignier Conder, and Horatio H. Kitchener. The Survey of Eastern Palestine: The Adwan Country (Vol. 1. 7 vols. London, U.K.: Palestine Exploration Fund, 1881), 1:229–30.
      • Claude Reignier Conder, Heth and Moab (London, U.K.: Bentley & Son, 1883), 151, 153–55.
      • William M. Thomson, The Land and the Book: Southern Palestine and Jerusalem (New York, N.Y.: Harper & Brothers, 1882), 371–76.
      • William M. Thomson, TThe Land and the Book: Lebanon, Damascus, and Beyond Jordan (New York, N.Y.: Harper & Brothers, 1885), 668–70. LINK
      • George Grove, “Zoar,” ed. William Smith, A Dictionary of the Bible (Philadelphia, Pa.: Winston, 1884), 1153.
      • J. Cunningham Geikie, The Holy Land and the Bible: A Book of Scripture Illustrations Gathered in Palestine (2 vols. London, U.K.: Cassell & Company, 1887), 2: 118–20.
      • Index
    • FACT 4: WOOD BELIEVES THAT BeD IS SODOM. page 59
    • FACT 5: ALBRIGHT DID NOT BELIEVE THAT BeD WAS SODOM. page 60
    • FACT 6: RAST AND SCHAUB DID NOT BELIEVE THAT BeD WAS SODOM. page 61
    • FACT 7: COLLINS BELIEVES THAT TeH IS SODOM. page 61
    • FACT 8: PUBLICATIONS PRIOR TO 2006 DO NOT INCLUDE COLLINS’ TeH RESEARCH.page 63
  2. CHAPTER FOUR – METHODOLOGY FACTS (PROPER SCIENTIFIC METHOD). page 64
    • FACT 9: THE A PRIORI METHOD IS GOOD SCIENCE. page 64
    • FACT 10: THE SERIAL GEOGRAPHY OF THE BIBLE IS RELIABLE. page 65
    • FACT 11: FEW BIBLICAL SITES HAVE EVER BEEN IDENTIFIED USING AN INSCRIPTION. page 66. Of all the biblical cities on your Bible maps, only Dan, Gezer, Gibeon, Hazor, Hebron, Jerusalem have a secondary inscription identifying their location. Steven Collins, and Latayne C. Scott. Discovering the City of Sodom: The Fascinating, True Account of the Discovery of the Old Testament’s Most Infamous City (New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, 2013), 273-96. Look Inside Only Ekron has a primary inscription identifying its location. Usually scholars use geographic indicators to identify a cities location (i.e., by this river, by this mountain, etc.). Sodom has 25 geographic indicators while Jerusalem has only 18. For more details see LINK   Index
    • FACT 12: WOOD HAS NEVER EXCAVATED BeD. page 67
    • FACT 13: THE EARLY READ OF THE TEH STRATIGRAPHY WAS DUE TO MODERN MILITARY ACTIVITY. page 67
    • FACT 14: A SURFACE SURVEY IS DIFFERENT TO AN EXCAVATION. page 69
  3. CHAPTER FIVE – HERMENEUTIC FACTS (PROPER INTERPRETIVE METHOD) page 70
    • FACT 15: THE KEY PASSAGE ON SODOM’S GEOGRAPHY IS GEN 13:1-12. page 70
    • FACT 16: GENESIS 14:10 IS REFERRING TO THE LOCATION FOR THE BATTLE OF THE MESOPOTAMIAN KINGS, NOT THE LOCATION OF THE CITIES OF THE PLAIN. page 71
    • FACT 17: ZEBOIIM IS PLURAL IN HEBREW. page 72
    • FACT 18: HEBREW DOES NOT HAVE THE WORDS NORTH, SOUTH, EAST OR WEST. page 73
    • FACT 19: EZEKIEL IS NOT BIBLICAL NARRATIVE. page 74
    • FACT 20: JEREMIAH 50:35-46 IS PROPHETIC LITERATURE. page 75
    • FACT 21: THERE IS A SALT CURSE MENTIONED IN THE BIBLE. page 77
  4. CHAPTER SIX – GEOGRAPHY FACTS (THE LOCATION)
    • FACT 22: THE JORDAN VALLEY WAS VISIBLE FROM BETWEEN BETHEL AND AI. page 78
    • FACT 23: SODOM WAS LOCATED ON THE PLAIN (KIKKĀR) OF THE JORDAN. page 80
    • FACT 24: THE EXACT LOCATION OF THE VALLEY OF SIDDIM IS NOT KNOWN. page 82
    • FACT 25: Bab edh-Dhra and Tall el-Hammam ARE BOTH LOCATED IN THE GREAT RIFT VALLEY. page 83.   along a fault line which is known to have asphalt /bitumen, sulfur, tar, and natural gas (Pliny the Elder Nat. Hist. 2.226; 5.72; 7.65; 28.80; 35.178). Petroleum products are not unique to Bab edh-Dhra.  I’m working beside the hot springs at Hammam (means "hot springs") and while we are working you can smell the sulfur. Collins points to bitumen (tar) chunks that have been mined all around the area, including at Tall el-Hammam. Steven Collins. “Where Is Sodom? The Case for Tall el-Hammam.Biblical Archaeology Review 39, no. 2 (2013). For more details see LINK. Index
    • FACT 26: SMOKE FROM BOTH TeH AND BeD WOULD HAVE BEEN VISIBLE FROM HEBRON. page 84
    • FACT 27: TeH IS ALSO ABEL-SHITTIM. page 85
    • FACT 28: TeH IS ALSO LIVIAS. page 85
    • FACT 29: ABRAHAM WAS GIVEN THE LAND OF CANAAN. page 86
    • FACT 30: FOR THE SST ADVOCATES, GEN 14:1-14 WOULD REQUIRE CHEDORLAOMER TO HAVE GONE BACK ON HIS TRACKS. page 86
    • FACT 31: THE SOUTHERN DEAD SEA REGION LOOKS CURSED. page 87
    • FACT 32: SHEA’S IDENTIFICATION OF CITIES BASED ON THE EBLAITE GEOGRAPHIC ATLAS IS SUSPECT. page 88
    • FACT 33: THERE ARE SEVERAL POSSIBLE LOCATIONS FOR ZOAR. page 89
      • Southern Zoar – Ghor eṣ-Ṣafi page 89
      • Northern Zoar 1 – Tall Iktanu  page 91
      • Northern Zoar 2 – Serâbît el-Mushaqqar page 92
      • Northern Zoar 3 – On the Arnon River page 93
    • FACT 34: LOT’S CAVE IS LOCATED ON THE MADABA MAP. page 93
  5. CHAPTER SEVEN – CHRONOLOGY FACTS (THE TIME PERIOD)  page 96
    • FACT 35: NOT ALL ARCHAEOLOGISTS APPROACH BIBLICAL NUMBERS IN THE SAME WAY. page 96
    • FACT 36: CONSERVATIVE SCHOLARS DEBATE THE DATE OF THE EXODUS.  page 96
    • FACT 37: MOST MAXIMALISTS BELIEVE THAT THE PATRIARCHS LIVED IN THE MIDDLE BRONZE AGE. page 98. Most evangelical scholars and maximalists would place the date of the Patriarchs (Abraham and Lot) in the Middle Bronze Age (MB). See the chart in J. Randall Price, The Stones Cry Out: What Archaeology Reveals About the Truth of the Bible (Eugene, Oreg.: Harvest House, 1997), 106, John J. Bimson , “Archaeological Data and the Dating of the Patriarchs” Essays on the Patriarchal Narratives. Leicester:, U.K. InterVarsity (1980). 59-92. Collins, Steven. “Tall el-Hammam Is Still Sodom: Critical Data Sets Cast Serious Doubt on E.H. Merrill’s Chronological Analysis.” Biblical Research Bulletin 13, no. 1 (2013): 1–27. Link The question to answer is: When were the cities of Bab edh-Dhra and Tall el-Hammam destroyed?  Index
    • FACT 38: BeD WAS DESTROYED IN THE EB III BUT WAS REOCCUPIED IN EB IV. page 99
    • FACT 39: BeD AND NUMEIRA WERE DESTROYED AT DIFFERENT TIMES. page 102. Schaub, who dug at Bab edh-Dhra, indicates that Numeira was destroyed at a different time period (2600 BC) from Bab edh-Dhrâ (2350–2067 BC). Also see Steven, Collins, and Latayne C. Scott, Discovering the City of Sodom: The Fascinating, True Account of the Discovery of the Old Testament’s Most Infamous City (New York, N.Y.: Simon & Schuster, 2013), 152, 231. Index
    • FACT 40: TeH WAS DESTROYED IN THE MBA AND LAY UNOCCUPIED FOR OVER 500 YEARS. page 104
  6. CHAPTER EIGHT – ARCHAEOLOGY FACTS (MATERIAL EVIDENCE)
    • FACT 41: TeH IS THE LARGEST EB SITE AND THIRD LARGEST MB SITE IN THE SOUTHERN LEVANT. page 105
    • FACT 42: BeD IS THE LARGEST EB SITE IN THE SOUTHERN DEAD SEA REGION. page 109
    • FACT 43: BeD AND NUMEIRA ARE THE ONLY INHABITED TOWNS IN THE SOUTHERN DEAD SEA REGION IN THE EBA.  page 110
      • 1. Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ  page 110
      • 2. Numeira page 111
      • 3. eṣ-Ṣafi page 111
      • 4. Feifa  page 112
      • 5. Khirbet al-Khanazir  page 112
    • FACT 44: THERE ARE FOUR MB SITES IN THE JORDAN VALLEY WITH EVIDENCE OF DESTRUCTION. page 113
      • 1. Tall el-Ḥammâm  page 113
      • 2. Tall Nimrin page 114
      • 3. Tall al-Kafrayn  page 114
      • 4. Tall Bleibel and Tall el-Musṭāḥ page 114
    • FACT 45: THERE IS NO LBA ARCHITECTURAL OCCUPATION IN THE JORDAN VALLEY. page 115
      • Tall el-Ḥammâm  page 115
      • Tall Nimrin page 115
      • Tall al-Kafrayn page 116
      • Tall Iktanu  page 116
      • Tell Al Sultan (Jericho)  page 116
      • Tall Bleibel (Tall Bulaybil) page 117
      • Tall el-Musṭāḥ (Tall al-Musṭāḥ) page 117
    • FACT 46: TeH IS NOT HESHBON. page 118
    • FACT 47: THE PENTAPOLIS ARE NOT ALL MENTIONED TOGETHER IN THE EBLA TABLETS, AND MANY PEOPLE DOUBT WHETHER THEY ARE LISTED AT ALL.    119
    • FACT 48: THERE ARE REPORTS OF A MINOAN CONNECTION AT TEH.    121
  7. CHAPTER NINE – DESTRUCTION FACTS (MATERIAL EVIDENCE)
    • FACT 49: BOTH SITES PROVIDE FIERY DESTRUCTION EVIDENCE.  page 123
      • Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ  page 123
      • Tall el-Ḥammâm  page 124
    • FACT 50: BOTH SITES HAVE A CITY GATE COMPLEX THAT WAS DESTROYED.  page 124
      • Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ  page 124
      • Tall el-Ḥammâm  page 125
    • FACT 51: HUMAN REMAINS HAVE BEEN FOUND AT BOTH SITES. page 126
      • Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ page 126
      • Tall el-Ḥammâm page 126
    • FACT 52: THERE ARE VARIOUS THEORIES FOR THE DESTRUCTION OF THE PENTAPOLIS. page 127
      • Destroyed by a volcano:  page 127
      • Destroyed by an earthquake:  page 128
      • Destroyed by liquefaction:  page 128
      • Conclusion:  page 129
    • FACT 53: THE CEMETERY AT BeD WAS BURNED.  page 129
    • FACT 54: SHOOTING FLAMING ARROWS INTO THE AIR WAS COMMONLY USED BY ENEMIES IN THE ANE. page 131. In the ancient world it was common to destroy cities by means of shooting flaming arrows into the air and they would land on the roof of buildings and catch the wattle and daub (twigs and sticks which the roof is made from) on fire. See the siege of Lachish reliefs in the British Museum where the fiery arrows are depicted on the reliefs. Page 80 in Price, The Stones Cry Out. Prior to the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah (Gen 18) we know that the region as far south as the Amorites, who were dwelling in Hazazon-tamar (= En Gedi in the Israeli side of the Dead Sea 2 Chronicles 20:2),  had conflict with foreign nations (Shinar, Ellasar, Elam, Goiim, Gen 14:1-7). Index
    • FACT 55: MYSTERIOUS CLINKERS, IDENTIFIED AS TRINITITE, WERE DISCOVERED AT TeH.  page 132
  8. CHAPTER TEN – GEOLOGY FACTS (MATERIAL EVIDENCE)  page 133
    • FACT 56: THE DEAD SEA IS AT ITS LOWEST POINT IN HISTORY AND THERE ARE NO EXPOSED RUINS. page 133
    • This century the Dead Sea is at its lowest point in history (except the Byzantine period) and no ruins has been found along the shores that were once submerged under the Dead Sea. For more details see the interactive Dead Sea Level chart. Index
    • FACT 57: BITUMEN IS FOUND ALL AROUND THE DEAD SEA.  page 135. The mention of bitumen/tar (literally slime) pits in Genesis 14:10 are stated in the context of the battle of the Elamite king (Chedorlaomer, King of Elam) and the kings of Cities of the Plain.  The passage states that the kings of the cities of the plain “joined forces in the Valley of Siddim (that is, the Salt Sea)” (Gen 14:3 ESV). This does not say that this is where the Cities of the Plain were located, but this is where the battle took place. The text indicates that the battle took place in a different location than where the “cities of the plain” were situated, as the kings “went out, came out, or marched out” from the cities. Bitumen pits (sink holes) are located on the western side of the Dead Sea and not the southern end (Meir Abelson et al., “Evaluation of the Dead Sea Sinkholes,” in New Frontiers in Dead Sea Paleoenvironmental Research, ed. Yehouda Enzel, Amotz Agnon, and Mordechai Stein, Special Papers: Geological Society of America 401 (Boulder, Colo.: Geological Society of America, 2006), 248; O. Amit and A. Bein, “The Evolution of the Dead Sea Floating Asphalt Blocks: Simulations by Pyrolisis,” Journal of Petroleum Geology 2, no. 4 (1980): 429–47; Tina M. Niemi, Zvi Ben-Avraham, and Joel R. Gat, eds., The Dead Sea: The Lake and Its Setting, Oxford Monographs on Geology and Geophysics 36 (New York, N.Y.: Oxford University Press, USA, 1997). Index
      • South  page 137
      • North  page 137
      • East  page 137
      • West  page 137
      • Location of bitumen pits  page 138
    • FACT 58: JEBEL USDUM IS NOT SODOM OR LOT’S WIFE.  page 139
    • FACT 59: TeH IS WELL WATERED.  page 139
    • FACT 60: THE SOUTHERN JORDAN VALLEY WAS WELL-WATERED IN ANCIENT TIMES. page 140
    • FACT 61: THE DEAD SEA EXISTED PRIOR TO GENESIS 19. page 140
    • FACT 62: THERE IS PALEO-BOTANICAL EVIDENCE AT BOTH SITES. page 141

Sodom Resources

Tall el-Hammam

On Tall el-Hammam, (Sodom?), Trinity Southwest University (Dr. Steven Collins) is digging in the northern Jordan Valley, for the location of Sodom. Here is Dr. Collins (Feb 2016) explaining why he believes Tall el-Hammam is Sodom and how he came to locate it. LINK Note that in 1990 Kay Prag (Student of Kathleen Kenyon) also did a small excavation at Tall el-Hammam. Dr. Bryant Wood is supporting the southern location Bab edh-Dhra but has not dug there. Steve Collins and Bryant Wood are good friends and have worked together at Khirbet el-Maqatir (Ai) Excavation in Israel/West Bank, for six seasons (1995- 2000).

I would also recommend reading Dr. Collins article on Sodom in BAR magazine. All the Tall el-Hammam dig reports are available at this LINK. Good to look at the Latest Dig Report for an overview of what was discovered. More free downloadable research by Collins is available at the official Tall el-Hammam site and Biblical Research Bulletin (The online Bible and Spade articles are missing the color photographs which would have been helpful for you). Interviews and lectures by Dr. Collins can be found on YouTube.


  1. Sodom Update: (April 17, 2013) Here is a one hour video address by Dr. Collins at Calvary Church, Albuquerque, New Mexico.  It introduces some very interesting connections to the biblical text about Sodom and possible connections with the homosexual cultic practices of the Minoan civilization of Crete.
  2. Dr. Steven Collins at Tall el-Hammam: Dr. Collins describes how he came to believe that Tall el-Hammam is the site of historic Sodom in the Jordan Valley. 
  3. National Geographic Video: also has a program out on Tall el-Hammam as a possible candidate for Sodom (filmed in 2012). The episode of Ancient X files: Sodom and Gomorrah & Voynich Manuscript airs regularly. This program deals with two topics, the first of which is Sodom and then the second part will be on an ancient manuscript which is irrelevant to our discussion (you can skip this part). Although it does not deal with any of our archaeological research and discoveries (must read the articles for the details) it will give you some idea about the work there.
  4. Discovery Channel Video: This video describes Collins discovery of Tall el-Hammam as a possible location for ancient Sodom and the air burst theory. On the identification of the sites Tall El-Hammam on the Madaba map see Graves, David E., and D. Scott Stripling. “Identification of Tall El-Hammam on the Madaba Map.” Bible and Spade 20, no. 2 (2007): 35–45; Graves, David E., and D. Scott Stripling. “Is Tall El-Hammam on the Madaba Map?” In Near East Archaeological Society, 1–20. San Diego: Near East Archaeological Society, 2007; Graves, David E., and D. Scott Stripling. “Locating Tall El-Hammam on the Madaba Map.” Biblical Research Bulletin 7, no. 6 (2007): 1–11 where I was the first to identify Tall el-Hammam on the Madaba Map as Sodom, p. 45. I then discussed this with Dr. Collins. Craig Olsen was one of the volunteers at TeH in 2015, and I was his field supervisor.
    Index

Excavation Reports

Biblical Research Bulletin articles LINK
  • Collins, Steven, Gary A. Byers, and Michael C. Luddeni. “Tall El-Hammam Excavation Project, Season Activity Report, Season One: 2005/2006 Probe Excavation and Survey: Submitted to the Department of Antiquities of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, Jan 22, 2006.” Biblical Research Bulletin 6, no. 4 (2006): 1–13.
  • Collins, Steven, Gary A. Byers, Michael C. Luddeni, and John W. Moore. “Tall El-Hammam Excavation Project, Season Activity Report, Season Two: 2006/2007 Excavation and Survey: Submitted to the Department of Antiquities of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, January 26, 2006.” Biblical Research Bulletin 7, no. 9 (2007): 1–13.
  • Collins, Steven, Gary A. Byers, Michael C. Luddeni, John W. Moore, Abdelsamee’ Abu Dayyeh, Adeib abu-Shmais, Khalil Hamdan, Hussein Aljarrah, Jehad Haroun, and Steve McAllister. “Tall El-Hammam Excavation Project, Season Activity Report, Season Three: 2008 Excavation, Exploration, and Survey: Submitted to the Department of Antiquities of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, February 13, 2008.” Biblical Research Bulletin 8, no. 2 (2008): 1–13.
  • Collins, Steven, Khalil Hamdan, Gary A. Byers, Jehad Haroun, Hussein Aljarrah, Michael C. Luddeni, Steve McAllister, Qutaiba Dasouqi, and David E. Graves. “Tall El-Hammam Excavation Project, Season Activity Report, Season Four: 2009 Excavation, Exploration, and Survey: Submitted to the Department of Antiquities of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, February 29, 2009.” Biblical Research Bulletin 9, no. 1 (2009): 1–30
  • Collins, Steven. “Tall El-Hammam, Season Four: Data, Interpretations, and Insights From the 2009 Excavations.” In Annual Meeting of the American Schools of Oriental Research: New Orleans, LA, 1–31. Albuquerque, N.M.: TSU Press, 2009. InterLibrary Loan
  • Collins, Steven, Khalil Hamdan, and Gary A. Byers. “Tall El-Hammam: Preliminary Report on Four Seasons of Excavation (2006–2009).” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 53 (2009): 385–414.
  • Collins, Steven, Aljarrah Hussein, Gary A. Byers, Carroll M. Kobs, John Leslie, Adeib abu-Shmais, Jehad Haroun, et al. “Tall Al-Hammam Season Six, 2011: Excavation, Survey, Interpretations and Insights.” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 55 (2011): 581–607.
  • Collins, Steven, Khalid Tarawneh, Gary A. Byers, and Carroll M. Kobs. “Tall El-Hammam Season Eight, 2013: Excavation, Survey, Interpretations and Insights.” Biblical Research Bulletin (2013): 1–20.
  • Collins, Steven, Carroll M. Kobs, and Michael C. Luddeni. An Introduction to Tall Al-Hammam with Seven Seasons (2005-2011) of Ceramics and Eight Seasons (2005-2012) of Artifacts. Vol. 1. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2015.
  • Kobs, Carroll M., Steven Collins, Al-jarrah Hussein, and Hal Bonnette. “A Plaque Figurine at Tall al-Hammam, Season Six (2011).” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 55 (2011): 609–621.
  • Prag, Kay. “Preliminary Report on the Excavations at Tell Iktanu and Tall el-Hammam, Jordan 1990.” Levant 23 (1991): 55–66. LINK
  • Prag, Kay. “The Excavations at Tell Al-Hammam.” Syria 70, no. 1–2 (1990): 271–73.
  • Schath, Kenneth, Steven Collins, and Hussein Aljarrah. “Excavation of an Undisturbed Demi-Dolmen and Insights from the Al-Hammam Megalithic Field, 2011 Season.” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 55 (2011): 329–50. Request from ILL.
  • Archaeologists Excavate Massive Ancient Gateway in Jordan. Popular Archaeology Vol 8. Sept 2012. LINK
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Articles supporting Tall el-Hammam as Sodom:

See the articles listed in the Biblical Research Bulletin (Trinity Southwest University): LINK

  • Collins, Steven. “Where Is Sodom? The Case for Tall el-Hammam.Biblical Archaeology Review 39, no. 2 (2013), 31-41, 7071. PDF LOOKUP
  • Collins, Steven. “Sodom: The Discovery of a Lost City.Bible and Spade 20, no. 3 (2007): 70–77.
  • Collins, Steven, If You Thought You Knew the Location of Sodom and Gomorrah...Think Again, Biblical Research Bulletin 7. no. 4 (2007): 1–7.
  • Collins, Steven. “A Response to Bryant G. Wood’s Critique of Collins’ Northern Sodom Theory.Biblical Research Bulletin 7, no. 7 (2007): 1–36.
  • Collins, Steven. “Tall el-Hammam Is Sodom: Billington's Heshbon Identification Suffers From Numerous Fatal Flaws. Artifax 27, no. 3 (Summer 2012): 16–18.
  • Collins, Steven. “Forty Salient Points on the Geography of the Cities of the Kikkar.Biblical Research Bulletin 7, no. 1 (2007): 1–7. 
  • Collins, Steven. “Tall el-Hammam Is Still Sodom: Critical Data Sets Cast Serious Doubt on E.H. Merrill’s Chronological Analysis.Biblical Research Bulletin 13, no. 1 (2013): 1–27. This article includes the full text of Merrill, Eugene H. “Texts, Talls, and Old Testament Chronology: Tall Hammam as a Case Study.” Artifax 27, no. 4 (2012): 20–21.
  • Geisler, Norman L and Joseph M. Holden. The Popular Handbook of Archaeology and the Bible. Eugene, OR: Harvest House, 2013. Look Inside Pages 70, 191, 202, 214-220, 38387.
  • Graves, David E. “Sodom and Gomorrah: Northern Theory.” The Archaeology of the Old Testament: 115 Discoveries That Support the Reliability of the Bible. (Moncton, NB: Electronic Christian Media, 2019), 9195. LINK
  • Graves, David E. “Sodom and Gomorrah: Northern Theory.” Biblical Archaeology Vol. 1: An Introduction with Recent Discoveries That Support the Reliability of the Bible (Moncton, NB: Electronic Christian Media, 2014), 13840. LINK
  • Graves, David E. The Location of Sodom: Navigating the Maze of Arguments. Moncton, N.B.: Electronic Christian Media, 2016. LINK
  • Graves, David E. Key Facts for the Location of Sodom Student Edition: Navigating the Maze of Arguments. Moncton, N.B.: Electronic Christian Media, 2014. LINK
  • Graves, David E. “Facts from Archaeology: Sodom and Gomorrah.” Key Themes of the Old Testament: A Survey of Major Theological Themes (Moncton, NB: Electronic Christian Media, 2013), 204-07. Look Inside
  • Graves, David E. “Interaction with Scholars on the Location of Sodom and Gomorrah and Related Issues.” In Kikkar Dialogues, edited by Steven Collins, 23–25, 5455. Research & Discovery Series 1. Albuquerque, N.M.: Trinity Southwest University Press, 2014.
  • Graves, David E. “My Journey to Locate the Genesis Pentapolis North of the Dead Sea.” Biblical Research Bulletin 14, no. 2 (2014): 1–28. PDF
  • Graves, David E. “Sodom And Salt in Their Ancient Near Eastern Cultural Context.” Near East Archaeological Society Bulletin 61 (2016): 15–32. PDF
  • Olson, Craig. Which Site Is Sodom?: A Comparison of Bab edh-Dhra and Tall el-Hammam. Biblical Research Bulletin 14, no. 1 (2014): 1-18. An independent scholar who did his PhD. at Dallas Theological Seminary on “A Proposal for a Symbolic Understanding of the Patriarchal Lifespans.” Ph.D. diss., Dallas Theological Seminary, 2017.
  • Silva, Phil, and Steven Collins. “The Civilization-Ending 3.7KYrBP Kikkar Event: Archaeological Data, Sample Analyses, and Biblical Implications.” In Annual Meeting of the Near East Archaeological Society: Atlanta, Ga., 1–6. Albuquerque, N.M.: TSU Press, 2015. LikedIn or LINK
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Solomonic Administrative city and Livias Research

On the identification of the Iron Age remains at Tall el-Hammam as a Solomonic Administrative City see

  • Attaway, William. “The District List of Solomon in 1 Kings 4:7-19 and Tall El-Hammam: Is a Connection Feasible?” Ph. D. diss., Trinity Southwest University, 2017.
On the identification of the Roman/Byzantine remains at Tall el-Hammam as the city of Livias see these articles:

  • Graves, David E. “Livias (Tall el-Ḥammâm).” Biblical Archaeology Vol. 1: An Introduction with Recent Discoveries That Support the Reliability of the Bible (Moncton, NB: Electronic Christian Media, 2014), 19396. Google Look Inside
  • Graves, David E. “Livias (Tall el-Ḥammâm).” The Archaeology of the New Testament: 75 Discoveries That Support the Reliability of the Bible (Moncton, NB: Electronic Christian Media, 2019), 8385. LINK
  • Graves, David E. “Re-Examination of the Location for the Ancient City of Livias.” co-authored with Scott Stripling. Levant: The Journal of the Council for British Research in the Levant 43.2 (2011): 178-200. LINK for PDF. Here I identify the Roman remains as the Roman/Byzantine city of Livias (Tall el-Hammam may not only be Sodom, but was also Abel-Shittim [IB], Iron age administrative center [IA] and Livias [Roman Period], all in different periods).
  • Graves, David E., and Scott Stripling. “Identification of Tall el-Hammam on the Madaba Map.” Bible and Spade 20, no. 2 (2007): 35–45. PDF
  • Graves, David E. and Scott Stripling. “Locating Tall el-Hammam on the Madaba Map.” Biblical Research Bulletin 7, no. 6 (2007): 1–11.
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Bab edh-Dhra'

The Official Website for Bad edh-Dhra is Expedition Dead Sea Plain. The Follow the Pots website is not the official website for the excavation, but they are doing research on the looting that is taking place at the Bab edh-Dhra cemetery and contains helpful current information about the site. Consult their Bibliography. There is a lot of information in my book Key Fact for the Location of Sodom or The Location of Sodom. Remember to provide "the historical background of the site (including history of previous archaeological excavations, if any), objectives of the current excavation, progress at the site, and significance of discoveries to biblical study.” Make sure to choose good encyclopedia articles, journal articles, and books,that specialize in the subject. This will give you a cross section of material to work with.

Bab edh-Dhra' excavation reports and articles:

  • Bolen, Todd. “Bab Edh-Dhra.” Pictorial Library of Bible Lands, 2014. LINK .
  • Chesson, Meredith S. “Libraries of the Dead: Early Bronze Age Charnel Houses and Social Identity at Urban Bab Edh-Dhraʿ, Jordan.” Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 18 (1999): 137–64.
  • Chesson, Meredith S., and R. Thomas Schaub. “Life in the Earliest Walled Towns on the Dead Sea Plain: Numayra and Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” In Crossing Jordan: North American Contributions to the Archaeology of Jordan, edited by Thomas Evan Levy, P. M. Michèle Daviau, Randall W. Younker, and May Shaer, 245–52. London, UK: Equinox, 2007.
  • Dever, William G. “Review of Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations in the Cemetery Directed by Paul W Lapp, 1965-1967.” Israel Exploration Journal 43, no. 4 (1993): 281–83.
  • Donahue, Jack. “Geology and Geomorphology.” In Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations at the Town Site (1975-1981): Part 1: Text, edited by Walter E. Rast and R. Thomas Schaub, 2:18–55. Reports of the Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2003.
  • Graves, David E. “Bab Edh-Dhra.” Biblical Archaeology Vol. 1: An Introduction with Recent Discoveries That Support the Reliability of the Bible (Moncton, NB: Electronic Christian Media, 2014), 12629. Google Look Inside
  • Graves, David E. “Southern Theory.”The Archaeology of the Old Testament: 115 Discoveries That Support the Reliability of the Bible. (Moncton, NB: Electronic Christian Media, 2019), 8791. LINK
  • Harlan, Jack R. “Natural Resources of Bab Edh-Dhraʿ Region.” In Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations at the Town Site (1975-1981): Part 1: Text, edited by Walter E. Rast and R. Thomas Schaub, 2:56–61. Reports of the Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan. Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2003.
  • ———. “Natural Resources of the Southern Ghor.” In The Southeastern Dead Sea Plain Expedition: An Interim Report of the 1977 Season, edited by R. Thomas Schaub and Walter E. Rast, 155–64. AASOR 46. Boston, Mass.: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1981.
  • Lapp, Paul W. “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ (RB 1966).” Revue Biblique 73 (1966): 556–61.
  • ———. “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ (RB 1968).” Revue Biblique 75 (1968): 86–93, pls. 3–6a.
  • ———. “Bâb edh-Dhrâ' Tomb Tomb A 76 and Early Bronze I in Palestine.” Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 189 (1968): 12–41. JSTOR
  • ———. “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ, Perizzites and Emim.” In Jerusalem Through the Ages: The Twenty-Fifth Archaeological Convention, 1–25. Jerusalem: Israel Exploration Society, 1968.
  • ———. “The Cemetery at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ, Jordan.” Archaeology 19, no. 2 (1966): 104–11. JSTOR
  • Lev, David. “Russia Decides to Search for Sodom and Gomorrah-in Jordan.” Arutz Sheva 7: Israel National News, December 14, 2010. LINK.
  • McCreery, David W. “The Paleoethnobotany of Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” In Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations at the Town Site (1975-1981): Part 1: Text, edited by Walter E. Rast and R. Thomas Schaub, 2:449–63. Reports of the Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2003.
  • Ortner, Donald J. “A Preliminary Report on the Human Remains from the Bab Edh-Dhra’ Cemetery.” In The Southeastern Dead Sea Plain Expedition: An Interim Report of the 1977 Season, edited by R. Thomas Schaub and Walter E. Rast, 119–32. ASOR 46. Boston, Mass.: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1981.
  • Rast, Walter E. “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” Edited by David Noel Freedman, Gary A. Herion, David F. Graf, and John David Pleins. Anchor Bible Dictionary. New York, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1996.
  • ———. “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ and the Origin of the Sodom Saga.” In Archaeology and Biblical Interpretation: Essays in Memory of D. Glenn Rose, edited by Leo G. Perdue, Lawrence E. Toombs, and Gary L. Johnson, 185–201. Atlanta, Ga.: John Knox, 1987.
  • ———. “Bronze Age Cities along the Dead Sea.” Archaeology 40, no. 1 (1987): 42–49. JSTOR
  • ———. “Patterns of Settlement at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” In The Southeastern Dead Sea Plain Expedition: An Interim Report of the 1977 Season, edited by R. Thomas Schaub and Walter E. Rast, 7–34. AASOR 46. Boston, Mass.: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1981.
  • ———. “The 1975-1981 Excavations at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” In Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations at the Town Site (1975-1981): Part 1: Text, edited by Walter E. Rast and R. Thomas Schaub, 1:1–17. Reports of the Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan 2. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2003.
  • ———. “The Southeastern Dead Sea Valley Expedition, 1979.” The Biblical Archaeologist 43, no. 1 (1980): 60–61. JSTOR
  • Rast, Walter E., and R. Thomas Schaub. “A Preliminary Report of Excavations at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ, 1975.” In Preliminary Excavation Reports: Bab Edh-Dhrac, Sardis, Meiron, Tell El-Hesi, Carthage (Punic), edited by David Noel Freedman, 1–32. AASOR 43. Chicago, Ill.: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1978.
  • ———. , eds. Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations at the Town Site (1975-1981): Part 1: Text. Reports of the Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan 2. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2003.
  • ———. , eds. Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations in the Cemetery Directed by Paul W Lapp, 1965-1967. Reports of the Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan 1. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1989.
  • ———. “The Dead Sea Expedition: Bab Edh-Dhraʿ and Numeira, May 24-July 10, 1981.” American Schools of Oriental Research Newsletter, no. 4 (1982): 4–12.
  • Rast, Walter E., R. Thomas Schaub, David W. McCreery, Jack Donahue, and Mark A. McConaughy. “Preliminary Report of the 1979 Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan.” Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 240 (1980): 21–61. JSTOR
  • Schaub, R. Thomas. “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” In The New Encyclopaedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land, edited by Ephraim Stern, Ayelet Levinson-Gilboa, and Joseph Aviram, 1:130–36. Jerusalem: The Israel Exploration Society, 1993.
  • Schaub, R. Thomas. “Bâb edh-Dhrâʿ.” In The New Encyclopaedia of Archaeological Excavations in the Holy Land, edited by Ephraim Stern, Ayelet Levinson-Gilboa, and Joseph Aviram, 1:130–36. Jerusalem: The Israel Exploration Society, 1993. This article on the work at Bab edh-Dhra and Numeira is reproduced on their website Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain under the direction of Dr. Walter Rast – Emeritus, Valparaiso University and Dr. R. Thomas Schaub – Emeritus, Indiana University of Pennsylvania.
  • Schaub, R. Thomas.“Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” In The Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East, edited by Eric M. Meyers, 1:248–51. Oxford, U.K.: Oxford University Press, 1997.
  • Schaub, R. Thomas. “Ceramic Sequences in the Tomb Groups at Bab Edh-Dhraʿ.” Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 46 Boston, Mass.: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1979, 69–118.
  • Schaub, R. Thomas, and Walter E. Rast. “Preliminary Report of the 1981 Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan.” Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research, no. 254 (1984): 35–60. JSTOR
  • Schaub, R. Thomas, and Walter E. Rast. The Southeastern Dead Sea Plain Expedition: An Interim Report of the 1977 Season. Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research 46. Boston, Mass.: American Schools of Oriental Research, 1979. JSTOR
  • Weinstein, James M. “A New Set of Radiocarbon Dates from the Town Site.” In Bab Edh-Dhraʿ: Excavations at the Town Site: 1975-1981: Part 1 Text, edited by Walter E. Rast and R. Thomas Schaub, 1:638–48. Reports of the Expedition to the Dead Sea Plain, Jordan 2. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 2003.
  • "Bab edh-Dhra'" University of Melbourne. LINK
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Articles supporting Bab edh-Dhra as Sodom:

  • Billington, Clyde E. “Tall el-Hammam Is Not Sodom.Artifax (Spring 2012): 1–3. Billington does not believe that Tall el-Hammam nor Bab edh-Dhra are Sodom. See "Fact 46: Tall el-Hammam is not Heshbon." Graves, Key Facts for the Location of Sodom. page 118.
  • Bolen Todd. “Arguments Against Locating Sodom at Tall el-Hammam.” Biblical Archaeology Society, February 27, 2013. LINK
  • Bradshaw, Robert I. Archaeology and the Patriarchs. Biblical Studies.org.uk. n.p. [cited 11 April 2015]. Online: http://www.biblicalstudies.org.uk/article_archaeology.html#22 LINK
  • Govier, Gordon. “Looking Back: Claims to New Sodom Location Are Salted with Controversy.” Christianity Today 52, no. 4 (2008): 15–16.
  • Govier, Gordon. “Searching for Sodom: Is It Time to Rewrite Old Testament Chronologies?” ChristianityToday.com, February 18, 2014. LINK.
  • Merrill, Eugene H. “Texts, Talls, and Old Testament Chronology: Tall Hammam as a Case Study.” Artifax 27, no. 4 (2012): 20–21. The full text of Merrill's article is included in Collins, Steven. “Tall el-Hammam Is Still Sodom: Critical Data Sets Cast Serious Doubt on E.H. Merrill’s Chronological Analysis.Biblical Research Bulletin 13, no. 1 (2013): 1–27. See "Fact 32: Shea's Identification of Cities Based on the Eblaite Geographic Atlas is Suspect." Graves, Key Facts for the Location of Sodom. page 88
  • Schlegel, Bill. “Biblical Problems with Locating Sodom at Tall el-Hammam.BiblePlaces, January 4, 2012.
  • Shea, William H. “Two Palestinian Segments from the Eblaite Geographical Atlas.” In Word of the Lord Shall Go Forth: Essays in Honor of David Noel Freedman in Celebration of His Sixtieth Birthday, edited by Carol L. Meyers and M. O’Connor, 589–612. American Schools of Oriental Research. Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns, 1983. See "Fact 32: Shea's Identification of Cities Based on the Eblaite Geographic Atlas is Suspect." Graves, Key Facts for the Location of Sodom. page 88.
  • Wood, Bryant G. “Have Sodom And Gomorrah Been Found?Bible and Spade 3, no. 3 (1974): 65–90. Here Wood identifies Bab edh-Dhra with Zeboiim and not Sodom.
  • Wood, Bryant G. “The Discovery of the Sin Cities of Sodom and Gomorrah.Bible and Spade 12, no. 3 (1999): 67–80.
  • Wood, Bryant G. “Locating Sodom: A Critique of the Northern Proposal.Bible and Spade 20, no. 3 (2007): 78–84.
  • Udd, Kris J. “Bab Edh-Dhraʿ, Numeira, and the Biblical Patriarchs: A Chronological Study.” Ph.D. diss., Andrews University, 2011. I have noticed several errors in the facts which he presents in this dissertation. You should use it with caution and double check his sources and facts.
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