The “thinker” figure capping an 18-cm jug was found in a Middle Bronze Age grave alongside other funerary offerings.

A “unique” 3,800-year-old figurine showing a seated person, apparently deep in thought, has been unveiled in Israel.

Israel Antiquities Authority said on Wednesday that the figure – wearing a hat and with its chin resting on its hand – was discovered recently in excavations at Yehud, east of Tel Aviv.

It caps an 18cm jug and was found in a grave alongside other funerary offerings including daggers, arrowheads, and an axe head.

“Such a unique ceramic vessel, which is the first we’ve found, within the context of the grave, can indicate that an important person was buried there,” Gilad Itach, the authority’s excavation director, told AFP news agency.

The subject’s sex was not completely clear but it was probably male [Menahem Kahana/AFP]

The findings date from the Middle Bronze Age, also known as the Canaanite period, but it is impossible to say who the creators of the objects and the person buried at the site were since they left no writing, Itach added.

He said the subject’s sex was not completely clear, but it was probably male.

“The level of precision and attention to detail in creating this almost 4,000-year-old sculpture is extremely impressive,” Itach said.

“One can see that the face of the figure seems to be resting on its hand as if in a state of reflection.”