The current excavation was conducted in three areas (A–C; Fig. 1). Area A (al-Mashid Street; map ref. 221445/626785) exposed a section of the lower aqueduct to Jerusalem; Area B (57 al-Sultan Street; map ref. 22171/62668) yielded a rock-hewn installation; and Area C (map ref. 22208/62625), located in the courtyard of an elementary school, yielded a couple of walls.
 
Area A—The Lower Aqueduct to Jerusalem. A section of the aqueduct was exposed along 7.5 m (Figs. 2, 3). Its southern part was almost entirely preserved, whereas the condition of the northern part deteriorates as it nears the road. The aqueduct was mostly built and partly hewn in the limestone bedrock (full width 1.5 m). In the early phases of the conduit, the water flowed inside a plastered channel (specus; upper width 0.55 m, lower width 0.4 m); the channel’s floor was not exposed. The same plaster was found on the sides of the channel and along its rim (width 0.8 m in the west, width 0.3 m in the east, where it was severely damaged). At the beginning of the Ottoman period, a terra-cotta pipe encased in concrete was placed in the bottom part of the channel (the top of the casing was situated 0.60–0.75 m below the top of the channel), thus preventing the exposure of the channel’s floor. Elliptical holes installed in the upper part of the pipe were probably intended to allow workmen to reach inside the pipe and apply a sealant between the pipe sections and/or open blockages in the pipe. A limestone covering slab (0.26 × 0.45 × 0.65 m) was found in situ at the southern end of the excavation. The water in the terra-cotta pipe flowed at an elevation of 741.8 m asl (as noted, the channel’s floor was not exposed, nor was a section cut through the earlier remains of the aqueduct). A haphazardly constructed vault of fieldstones and cement that was later added on top of the flow channel was discerned on the aqueduct in the southern part of the excavation (Fig. 4). The phenomenon whereby an Ottoman terra-cotta pipe was placed relatively deep in the flow channel, which was then covered with a convex vault of cement and stones, has not been observed elsewhere.
 
Area B—Rock-Hewn Installation. A rectangular shaft (0.8 × 1.1 m; Figs. 5, 6) led to an installation (excavated depth 2.5 m), whose sides, apart from the western one, were vertically hewn. The installation’s western wall was missing at a depth of c. 2 m, and it seems that this was a natural cavity in the bedrock. The excavation was not finished, and therefore the complete plan and purpose of the installation could not be determined.
 
Area C—Wall Remains. Two superimposed walls (W1, W2; Figs. 7, 8) were exposed. The upper one (W1) consisted of large stones set on their narrow side, and its course ran at a slight angle to W2. Wall 2 was built of large stones arranged on their broad side. These walls evidently functioned as field walls during two different periods. Two coins, one from the fourth century CE (IAA 147572) and the other from the Umayyad period following the reform of ‘Abd al-Malik (697–750 CE; IAA 147573), were found in a brown soil fill west of W1. It is possible that the walls were related to a monastery dating from the Byzantine and Umayyad periods, discovered c. 250 m to the west (Eirikh-Rose 2007; ‘Adawi 2014).