Archaeologist Discovers Startling Evidence of Ancient City of S’dom

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JORDAN (VINnews) — An archaeologist believes that he has discovered the ancient site where S’dom once stood. In a recent podcast interview, the expert described an abundance of evidence to support his belief.

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Trinity Southwest University’s Dean of Archaeology Steven Collins told podcast host Joel Rosenberg that he and his team believe the Tell el-Hammam site in Jordan appears to have many of the markers of S’dom. Scattered Bronze-age remains appear to have been melted in a “flash heat” scenario, matching the Torah’s description of how S’dom burned to the ground with sulfur and fire.

Collins says the location matches the Torah’s description and that the on-site physical evidence – including “glazed” pottery – supports his case.

Collins referenced a 2022 paper in the journal Nature in which researchers reported evidence of a “highly unusual catastrophic event” – possibly resembling a meteor – that left a “charcoal-rich destruction layer” and melted objects roughly 4,000 years ago in Tall el-Hammam.

The paper suggested that Tall el-Hammam was “wiped out in the blink of an eye,” Collins said.

These chilling details seem to be highly aligned with the Torah’s depiction of S’dom’s demise.

Digging in the soil, Collins said, “as soon as we get a few centimeters into that [Bronze Age] matrix, this piece of pottery, the shoulder of a storage jar, is facing up at us. And it looks like it’s glazed.”

A member of his team who worked on the Manhattan Project which developed the atomic bomb looked at the melted shard and remarked, “Wow, that looks like Trinity,” Collins said. “Trinity” was the code name for the first nuclear test site in New Mexico.

The geographical evidence supports the theory as well. Collins said that “there are at least 25 known pieces of geography [in the Torah] that you can triangulate between to take you to the city of Sodom.” For example, Bereishis 13:10 states that when Lot was at Beis -El and Ai, he traveled eastwards. Tall el-Hammam is east of Beis-El and Ai.

Other locations in the region that have been hypothesized as sites for S’dom don’t fit the Torah, he added.

“It was actually the Biblical text that put us at this site,” he said. “We just simply navigated around the geography.”


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22 Comments
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Just Sayin
Just Sayin
9 months ago

Actually, I don’t need to go that far. I look around over here in the USA and see Sedom all over again.

get it straight
get it straight
9 months ago

wow amazing to see the reality of the torah, we obviously don’t need any proofs, but its still amazing.

Rosalie J Lieberman
Rosalie J Lieberman
9 months ago

A non-Jewish man I worked with years ago, who was in the Army and spent time in Egypt, claims there’s plenty of archaeological proof of the Israelites time in ancient Egypt under forced slavery, but for reasons I don’t remember, he said it isn’t publicized. Yet, the Egyptians still believe “we” owe them billions due to the gold and silver our ancestors took. Not just in the time of Alexander the Great, but more recently some lawyers there wanted to sue Israel. Fascinating.

uneducated
uneducated
9 months ago

The member of his team who worked on the Manhattan Trinity project in 1942 would have to be well over 100 years old now. More senile than Joe and as stupid as the stable genuis (no one could be stupider).

Last edited 9 months ago by uneducated
Hock
Hock
9 months ago

Being that Sedom was upended (turned over) it’s unlikely or impossible that any remnants of Sedom exists.
As usual the “diggers” have to justify their salary so they come up with tales.

hard at work yeshiva grad
hard at work yeshiva grad
9 months ago

what is fascinating is that the archeologists have discovered that there was a very vibrant branch of y????? in sedom

Meir
Meir
9 months ago

This is old news. Nothing new. This is one of the only old stories in the Torah corroborated by archeology.