JEDDAH: The Saudi Commission for Tourism and National Heritage (SCTH) has revealed a new archaeological site at Halit Al-Athari in Dawadmi province in Riyadh region.
The SCTH has discovered a number of ancient urban traces on the site. The discovery was made during the first season of the excavation project at Halit Al-Athari.
The head of the excavation team and director of the National Heritage Department, Ajab Al-Otaibi, said the excavation revealed a mosque in the style of the first Islamic era, and models of houses consisting of yards, storage rooms and work areas containing furnaces to melt metals.
He pointed out that a number of inscriptions and Islamic writings were documented around the site, giving a new dimension to the history of the region and its civilization during the early Islamic period.
Pottery discovered on the site was studied and classified. It emerged from preliminary results that it could date back to the early Umayyad or Abbasid eras, Al-Otaibi said.
Riyadh's Dawadmi province emerges as an ancient hub of foundries
Riyadh's Dawadmi province emerges as an ancient hub of foundries
- Pottery discovered on the site was studied and classified
Saudi Arabia’s KAUST named FIFA’s first research institute in MENA
- KAUST President Prof. Sir Edward Byrne said that the university’s selection as the fifth FIFA Research Institute in the world — and the first in the region — marks a significant achievement, reflecting Kingdom’s growing presence in international football
RIYADH: FIFA has designated the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology as its first research institute in the Middle East and Asia to support the development of innovative football research, the Saudi Press Agency reported on Tuesday.
The recognition highlights KAUST’s commitment to integrating sports, academic research and industry through advanced, high-level initiatives grounded in rigorous scientific methodologies, contributing to the advancement of football studies.
KAUST President Prof. Sir Edward Byrne said that the university’s selection as the fifth FIFA Research Institute in the world — and the first in the region — marks a significant achievement, reflecting Saudi Arabia’s growing presence in international football.
The accreditation aligns with national efforts to invest in research and development and promote the knowledge economy, supporting Saudi Vision 2030’s goals of building an advanced sports system based on innovation and sustainability.
The collaboration’s first project focuses on developing advanced AI algorithms to analyze historical FIFA World Cup broadcast footage, transforming decades of match videos into structured, searchable data, according to the KAUST website.
This work opens new opportunities to apply state-of-the-art computer vision techniques and deepen understanding of how football has evolved over time.
The second project uses player and ball tracking data from the FIFA World Cup 2022 in Qatar and the FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 in Australia and New Zealand to compile comprehensive datasets capturing in-game dynamics.
These datasets provide deeper insights into human movement, playing techniques and performance dynamics through AI-driven analysis.









