Ginnig is a tell (archaeological settlement mound) in Upper Mesopotamia (modern Nineveh Governorate, Iraq) that was occupied at the transition from the PPNB to the Pottery Neolithic.
The complete building was constructed of tauf walls and consisted of multiple small, irregular rooms .
Small doorways gave access to the rooms and these are parallelled at other contemporary sites such as Sotto and Yarim Tepe.
Animal bone and skull remains found at the bottom of the walls and in pits dug into the floors of the rooms have been interpreted as ritual deposits related to the "opening" and "closing" of the building.
[2] The pottery from the latest level has been described as a "monotone prototype version of the now well-known proto-Hassuna assemblage".