Two walls (W106—exposed length 5 m, width 0.5 m; W108—exposed length 3.4 m, width 0.5 m; Fig. 3), founded on the soil and built of dressed limestone (0.2 × 0.5 × 0.7 m) with earth and small stones in between, were discovered in the southern part of the excavation area. The walls survived to a height of one course. Wall 108 continued outside the excavation area. A floor (L113, L115) made of limestone, soil and small stones abutted both of the walls from the east. It seems that the walls and floor were part of a building that extended beyond the limits of the excavation. Jar fragments dating to the Byzantine period (Fig. 4:3–7) were discovered in the southern part of the excavation area. A wall (W112; exposed length 4.4 m, width 0.5 m; Fig. 5) founded on the soil and built of dressed limestone blocks (0.25 × 0.40 × 0.40 m) preserved to a height of only one course was revealed in the northern part of the excavation area. Adjacent to the wall, to its west, was an installation (L117), founded on the soil and built of small limestone fieldstones. Byzantine-period jar Byzantine period (Fig. 4:1, 2, 8) were discovered during the excavation of the wall and the installation.
The excavated remains seem to have belonged to the outskirts of a Byzantine-period (sixth–seventh centuries CE) settlement, which was most dense at the top of the tell. The extensive farmland surrounding the tell was used mainly for agriculture, and the settlement evidently did not extend as far as the cultivated area.