Archaeologists excavated a corbelled passageway and a large vault built of thousands of unfired mud bricks, the first example of corbelled architecture found in Israel.
Three of the five were found where the temple's wall once, and the other two were discovered in post holes.
An Israeli teenager found an ancient Hellenistic ring while visiting a national park in the Golan Heights.
It is the first discovery of its kind from the Phoenicopteridae flamingo family in the Americas and only the second in the world.
The vessel was probably part of a river fleet serving Viminacium, the sprawling and highly-developed Roman city of 45,000 people.
This ancient trade route facilitated significant commerce between Northern and Southern Europe, highlighting the site's pivotal role in regional connectivity during ancient times.
The Casas del Turuñuelo site is the best-preserved building on land in the western Mediterranean to date.
The team made the discoveries during excavations at the temple of Esna, where they had been preserved by a layer of dirt and soot for almost 2,000 years.
Based on new findings, researchers suggest that ritualistic belief and economic factors were more closely fused for Neolithic people in northwest Arabia than previously believed.
The forged "artifact" was discovered earlier this week after a foreign researcher left it behind at the excavation site last summer.