El-Amrah, Egypt
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El-Amrah is a site about {{convert|120|km|mi|abbr=on}} south of Badari, Upper Egypt.David Randall-MacIver; A C Mace; F Ll Griffith El Amrah and Abydos, 1899-1901, (Offices of the Egypt exploration fund 1902, London, Boston, Mass.,).
Archaeological discoveries in 1901 at El-Amrah, were the basis of what is now known as the Amratian culture, a Naqada I cultureGrimal, Nicolas (1992). A History of Ancient Egypt. Blackwell. p. 28. of predynastic Upper Egypt, that lasted from 4400 BC to {{circa}} 3500 BC.Shaw, Ian, ed. (2000). The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt. Oxford University Press. p. 479.
File:Model cattle, El-Amra, Naqada I, British Museum EA 35506.jpg|Model cattle, El-Amra, Naqada I, British Museum EA 35506
File:Pre-Dynastic model house, El-Amra, Naqada IIC until 3200 BCE, British Museum EA35505.jpg|Pre-Dynastic model house, El-Amra, Naqada IIC until 3200 BCE, British Museum EA35505
References
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Category:Neolithic cultures of Africa
Category:4th millennium BC in Egypt