Parts of the aqueduct’s sides and floor were excavated in the northern segment of the section. The eastern side of the aqueduct, which was built of small fieldstones that were coated with two layers of white plaster, was preserved in the northern part of the segment (L100; 1.1 × 2.2 m, depth 0.2 m; Figs. 1: Section 4-4; 2), as well as the floor of the aqueduct, which was built of small fieldstones and brown soil, set on bedrock and covered with a layer of white plaster (L104). All that survived of the aqueduct’s western side were remains of plaster. The two sides of the aqueduct were exposed in the southern part of the northern segment (L102; 0.6 × 1.6 m, depth 0.4 m; Figs. 1: Section 1-1; 3). They were built on bedrock of plastered and semi-worked fieldstones. The floor of the aqueduct in this part was built of fieldstones and brown soil that were coated with four layers of white plaster. Ceramic material from the Byzantine period (fourth–sixth centuries CE) was recovered from the excavation of the northern segment of the section. A krater of the arched-rim basin type (Fig. 4:1), a Fine Byzantine Ware bowl (Fig. 4:3), a rouletted-type bowl with gouged decoration (Fig. 4:4) and another bowl fragment (Fig.4:5) were discovered above the floor of the aqueduct (L100). A krater fragment of an arched-rim basin type (Fig. 4:2) was discovered between the fieldstones that composed the aqueduct’s floor (L104). Part of the aqueduct’s western side (W1; max. length 5.5 m; Fig. 5), built on bedrock of small fieldstones and soil and plastered, was cleaned in the southern segment of the section. At least five layers of white plaster were discerned on the southern part of this western side (Fig. 1: Section 3-3).