Agricultural terrace walls
Wall 100(length c. 30 m, width c. 0.9 m, max. height c. 0.3 m; Fig. 3) was built of a stack of various sized stones. A 4 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.2 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 101 (length c. 150 m, width c. 0.7 m, max. height c. 0.4 m) was built of two rows of stones (max. length 0.6 m) and small stone fill between them. A 3 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.1 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 102 (length c. 50 m, width c. 0.8 m; Fig. 3) was built of two rows of stones (max. length 0.6 m). A 4 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.3 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 103 (length c. 20 m, width c. 1.1 m; height c. 0.2 m; Fig. 4) was built of two rows of stones (max. length 0.4 m) and small stone fill between them. A 4 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.2 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 104 (length c. 150 m, width c. 1.2 m, height c. 0.3 m) was built of two rows of stones (max. length 0.5 m) and small stone fill between them. A 5 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.3 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 106 (length c. 40 m, width c. 1.4 m, height c. 0.3 m) was built of a stack of small stones. A 5 m long section was excavated revealing soil (depth c. 0.5 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 108 (length c. 50 m, width c. 0.8 m) was built of two rows of stones (max. length 0.6 m) and small stone fill between them. A 5 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.4 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 109 (length c. 80 m; Fig. 5) was built of two rows of stones (max. length 1 m) and small stone fill between them. A 4 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.2 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 110 (length c. 70 m, width c. 0.7 m, max. height c. 0.2 m) was built of a stack of stones (max. length 0.8 m). A 5 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.1 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
Wall 112 (length c. 60 m, width c. 1.1 m, max. height 0.3 m) was built of a stack of stones (max. length 0.8 m). A 6 m long section was excavated, revealing soil (depth c. 0.3 m) overlying bedrock on either side of the wall.
 
Stone Fence
Wall 107 (length c. 220 m, width c. 0.8 m, height c. 0.3 m; fig. 6) was built of two rows of stones (max. length 0.4 m). A 5 m long section was excavated. The wall demarcates the border of an agricultural plot in which there are agricultural terraces such as those described above.

Stone Clearance Heaps
Stone Heap 105 (diam. 4 m, height 0.4 m; Fig. 7) consisted of a stack of stones (max. length 0.2 m) on an accumulation of soil (depth c. 0.1 m) on top of bedrock.
Stone Heap 111 (diam. 5 m, height 0.2 m; Fig. 8) consisted of a stack of stones (max. length 0.2 m) on soil (depth c. 0.2 m) accumulated on top of bedrock.

The slopes surrounding the excavation area are densely dotted with numerous agricultural terrace walls of the type described above. Walls similar to W107 divided the slopes into different-sized plots; however, due to the excavation’s limited scope it was impossible to determine the specific division of the slopes around the excavation area. Stone clearance heaps similar to those described above are scattered throughout the area. On the basis of the chronology of the surrounding ruins it can be assumed that the agricultural terraces date to the Byzantine period.