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A Grand Water System Is Excavated in Israel

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From Times Staff and Wire Reports

Archeologists in Israel have unearthed an ancient water system that was modified by the conquering Persians to turn the desert into a paradise.

The network of reservoirs, drainpipes and underground tunnels served one of the grandest palaces in the biblical kingdom of Judea.

Archeologists first discovered the palace in 1954, a structure built on a 6-acre site where the communal Ramat Rachel farm now stands.

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The Persians, who took control of the region around 539 BC from the Babylonians, renovated the water system and turned it into a thing of beauty, adding small waterfalls to try to turn a desert into a paradise.

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