Okay, so imagine you're playing a game of "digging up treasures" with your friends. You take turns digging holes in the backyard, hoping to find something cool like an old coin or a shiny rock.
Now imagine that instead of digging in your backyard, you're digging in a place called the Levant. The Levant is a region in the Middle East that includes countries like Israel, Jordan, Syria, and Lebanon.
But instead of looking for toys or shiny things, archaeologists are digging up really old stuff that people left behind a long time ago. They're like detectives who are trying to piece together the story of what life was like hundreds or even thousands of years ago.
Some of the things that they find might seem boring to you, like broken pieces of pottery or animal bones. But to the archaeologists, these things are really important clues that help them understand how people used to live, what they ate, and what they believed in.
Levantine archaeology is just the study of all these things that people have dug up in the Levant. It's a way of learning about the past and making sure that we don't forget what life was like a long time ago.