-
Random Facts
- What is the ozone hole in the atmosphere and how was it created?
- Why Is There No Gravity in Space?
- What happens when two oceanic plates collide?
- Who Discovered The Silver Sidewalk In Cobalt, Ontario, Canada?
- Why Is Burma The Worst Place In The World For Snakebites?
- What Colors Does a Colorblind Person See?
- What causes a rainbow and when do they occur?
- What Is a Shrew?
- How Is The Continental Shelf Formed?
- Who was Heinrich Barth of Germany?
-
Recent Comments
- loliipop on Who Invented Chewing Gum?
- Amy on When Did Books First Appear?
- Kayla on When was the first open-heart surgery performed and by whom?
- emh2010 on How Do Whirlpools Begin?
- CokeWaveDante on Where Is the World’s Largest Roller Coaster?
- saba on How Are Rocks Formed?
- sleapybibo on Why Do Cannibals Eat People?
- jim on Who Invented Gunpowder and When?
- sleapybibo on Why Do Cannibals Eat People?
- sdfg on Who Invented Gunpowder and When?
Tags
-
Pages
More Facts
-

Where Were the Oldest Pieces of Clothing Found?
During the 1960s, scientists began to unearth the remains of a city that had long lain buried under a mound in Turkey.
Only a small part of the ancient ruins have been uncovered so far, but it’s already known that the first city on this site was built about 8,000 years ago!
This city, known as Catal Huvuk, isn’t as old as Jericho in Palestine or some villages unearthed in Iraq. But the earliest city of Jericho probably had a population of fewer than 3,000 people. Catal Huyuk, on the other hand, may have had a population of more than 10,000. No other city of this size and age has yet been discovered anywhere in the world.
The houses in Catal Huyuk were connected and resembled the pueblo dwellings built by Indians in the American Southwest. There were no doors; the only entrance to each house was a hole in the roof, with a ladder leading from the roof opening into the main room. This room was used for cooking, eating, and sleeping. The smaller rooms around the main room were probably food storage areas.
The people of Catal Huyuk were hunters, farmers, and herdsmen. They were also tradesmen and fine craftsmen, producing tools, jewelry, statues, and wall paintings. The oldest pieces of clothing ever discovered came from Catal litiyuk.
These were wool garments made around the year 6000 B.C. 2,000 years before the first large cities were built in Mesopotamia!