Kuntillet 'Ajrud is an archaeological site on the Sinai Peninsula in present-day Egypt. The site was likely an Israelite trading post or oasis. Excavations undertaken in the 1970s revealed two large pithos jars (used to store water and other liquids) with intriguing drawings and text. The line drawings shown here from pithos A depicts the Tree of Life, representing the goddess Asherah. Two caprids (goat-antelopes) flank the tree and eat from its leaves. Asherah rests atop a majestic lion. The textual inscriptions found on the jars are, in large part, written in early Hebrew script. These inscriptions repeatedly mention Yahweh and are mostly religious in content.
Pithos A from Kuntillet 'Ajrud, late ninth-early eighth century BCE.
Text from: http://bibleodyssey.com/en/tools/image-gallery/k/kuntillet-ajrud