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Archeologists discover 1,600-year-old steelyard weight during Karabük excavations

Turkish archeologists have unearthed a 1,600-year-old steelyard weight during excavations in an ancient city near the Black Sea. The city of Hadrianopolis in the modern province of Karabük is believed to have been used as a settlement area in the late Hellenistic, Roman, and early Byzantine eras.

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Archeologists discover 1,600-year-old steelyard weight during Karabük excavations

"This is important data proving that commercial elements were supplied from the capital of the empire here," he added. "The weight we have belongs to the fourth century BC, which indicates about 1,600 years ago from the present."

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Archeologists discover 1,600-year-old steelyard weight during Karabük excavations

Excavations in Hadrianopolis over the last year have uncovered structures such as two baths, churches, one defense structure, tombs, an amphitheater, one arched and domed structure, a monumental cultic niche, city walls, villas, and other monumental buildings.

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Archeologists discover 1,600-year-old steelyard weight during Karabük excavations

The ancient city is famous for mosaics on the floors of churches, where the biblical rivers Gihon, Pishon, Tigris, and Euphrates, as well as many animals are depicted, such as horses, elephants, panthers, deer, and the griffins-a legendary creature with the head of an eagle and body of a lion.

Any movable artifacts found in the excavations city are taken to the museums in the surrounding provinces, while they are cataloged and preserved, said Çelikbas.