Three settlement strata consisting of building remains from the Persian period were documented. Remains of the material cultural from the Persian period, including built walls and a habitation level covered by a sand dune, were discovered in the current excavation at a depth of 2 m below the surface. No ancient remains were revealed in the trial trenches dug west of the excavation area prior to the field work.
 
Stratum III. Two walls (W2, W7; Figs. 2, 3) built of limestone were exposed. The walls were initially part of a large structure that was probably oriented in a general north–south direction, parallel to the coastline. The walls seem to have been in use together only during this phase. Their foundations were not revealed.
Stratum II. Wall 7 was canceled, and in its place, north of W2, was an earthen habitation level (L4) was instaled. An archaeological accumulation (L5) was identified between Strata II and I.
Stratum I. The upper part of W2, built of three new courses of large dressed stones, was constructed in the last phase. A layer of hard sediment (L1)—a mixture of sand and crumbled mudbrick material—covered the remains, and is probably indicative of mudbrick construction on top of the stone walls.
 
The ceramic assemblage recovered from alongside the architectural remains is typical of a coastal settlement from the end of the Persian period. It includes moratoria (Fig. 4:1, 2), Phoenician jars (Fig. 4:3–6) and amphorae (Fig. 4:7). Also found were iron tools (Fig. 5:1), long iron and bronze nails with a square cross-section (Fig. 5:2) and other bronze objects (Fig. 5:4, 5).
 
The finds from the current excavation together with those of the nearby excavations (Porat and Gal 1999; Lerer 2013; Fig. 1: A-2405, A-6562, respectively) mark the western boundary of the Persian settlement at Tel Nahariyya. Although this excavation was small in scale, its contribution to the study of the ancient Persian city on Tel Nahariyya is significant. The intensity of the three settlement strata and their fine state of preservation (more than 1.5 m of archaeological stratification) attest to the considerable effort that was invested in planning the high-quality massive construction along the settlement’s boundary.