Area A
A bedrock surface (20 × 50 m), in which various installations are hewn, was exposed at the top of a hill (Fig. 1). The surface was delimited by a wall (width c. 0.7 m, preserved height c. 0.5 m). The installations included a winepress (L100) that consisted of a treading floor (0.2 × 2.5 × 3.0 m) and a collecting vat (0.7 × 1.0 × 1.0 m; Figs. 1, 2). A rock-hewn water cistern (diam. of opening c. 1 m, depth c. 2.5 m) was in the middle of the collecting vat. Fragments of worn potsherds that dated to the Byzantine period were found in the excavation of the winepress. West of the winepress, two large cupmarks (Loci 100/1, 100/2; diam. 0.8 m, depth 0.3 m) and two smaller cupmarks (Loci 100/3, 100/4; diam. c. 0.1 m; Figs. 1, 3) were discovered.  
 
Area B
A cultivation plot (100 × 150 m) in the middle of the slope included farming terraces, one of which, built of small stones, was partly excavated (L101; length c. 30 m, height 0.5 m; Figs. 4, 5). The terrace abutted a field wall that was built of larger stones.
A quarry (L102; 1 × 5 × 3 m) was excavated at the bottom of the slope. Severance channels (width c. 0.1 m) were exposed, indicating the large masonry stones (0.4 × 1.2 m) that were quarried there. Next to the quarry were a hewn cupmark (diam. c. 0.5 m, depth c. 0.1 m) and a shallow rock-hewn channel that led to it (Figs. 6, 7).