“It is close to a miracle that cuneiform tablets made of unfired clay survived so many decades under water,” said Peter Pfälzner, professor of near eastern archaeology at University of Tübingen and one of the excavation directors, in a statement.

The tablets have not yet been deciphered, but Puljiz hypothesized they belonged to a private archive.

“I am curious next to see what the study of the cuneiform texts will reveal about the fate of the city and its inhabitants after the devastating earthquake,” she said.

All artifacts that were excavated, including the tablets, are being housed in the Duhok National Museum.

Before the city once again disappeared underwater, researchers covered the ruins in тιԍнт-fitting plastic sheets held down with stones and gravel. Puljiz hopes these measures will protect the ancient site from water erosion and prevent it from disappearing altogether.

Archaeologists and workers uncover the walls of a large building in the old city complex, which is interpreted as a storage building from the time of the Mittani Empire