Although it is not possible, without further research, to determine the answers to many questions surrounding Rogem Hiri, the site does provide clues to the socioeconomic structure of the people who built it. The site’s primary excavator, Yonathan Mizrachi, estimated that 42,000 tons of basalt rock were transported to Rogem Hiri for its construction and that it would take, “100 workmen working eight hours a day, six days a week, over six years at a minimum to build this complex.” (28) Such an investment of time and labor would require extensive planning, surplus resources to support the workmen, and a hierarchical social order. The use of proportions to measure out the site reflects an understanding of mathematics and testifies to the preplanning that went into its construction. The fact that the stones used are uncut connotes that metal tools were not used to shape the stones and that perhaps the technologies of metallurgy and masonry had not advanced very far in this culture. The site suggests a religious or cultic presence among the people, perhaps related to the cults of Babylon or Sumaria. The dolmans in the area and the central cairn reflect the burial practices of secondary users of the site. By extrapolation of such fragments of information can we begin to understand the cultural context of such a perplexing site as Rogem Hiri.