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Dishna (Arabic: دشنا, from Coptic: ⲧⲉϣⲛⲏ, lit. 'the tree garden'[1]) is a settlement west of Qena situated on the north bank of the river Nile in Qena Governorate, Egypt.
Dishna is 453 km (281 mi) from Cairo.[2][3]
An expedition of the Southern University of Texas explored the Sebilian culture on the Dishna plains.[4] The Ain Khoman tools of Oasis Baharia were identified as similar to the Esnan industry of the Dishna dated to c.12,300 B.P, differing only with respect to bifacial tools.[5] Several sites between Wadi Kubbaniya and the plains contained assemblages also of Esnan industrial production.[6] The Esnan industry, also known as Mesnian, employed a non-levallois technique, productions composed largely of end-scrapers, though also including a much smaller number of arch-backed bladelets and trapezoid.[7]