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Controlled experiments in lithic technology and function

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  • Additional Information
    • Publication Date:
      2020
    • Collection:
      Publisso (ZB MED-Publikationsportal Lebenswissenschaften)
    • Abstract:
      AbstractAncient Ostia at the mouth of the River Tiber into the Tyrrhenian Sea was largely significant for the economic supply of Rome. Ostia itself experienced an extraordinary period of prosperity in the second century AD. Starting in AD 42, a first new harbour at Portus was built by Emperor Claudius close to Ostia. It reached its full functionality under Emperor Trajan in the early second century AD, only. At Ostia itself, previous archaeological and geoarchaeological studies have brought to light a lagoon-type harbour at the western fringe of the city operating between the fourth and the second century BC in an artificially excavated harbour basin. From the second century BC onwards, a considerably smaller and shallower part of this western harbour basin was still in function as a fluvial harbour. So far, it was unclear whether Ostia’s western harbour was still in use when the harbour at Portus was set into function in the first to second century AD, or if the latter partially replaced Ostia’s harbour infrastructure. According to archaeological evidence, Ostia’s navalia-temple-complex, the main building at the eastern fringe of the western river harbour basin, was built in the second quarter of the first century AD. Was this prestigious harbour building erected although the associated harbour seemed to have been already given up before? We conducted detailed geoarchaeological investigations at the immediate western front of the navalia-temple complex. Results were compared with archaeological data obtained from excavations carried out in 2000/2001. A multi-proxy approach was used to reconstruct the history and evolution of the harbour. It was possible to identify subsurface structures and evaluate the local stratigraphy. Vibracoring brought to light a more than 1 m thick section of anopus reticulatumwall with parts of the originalopus latericiumon top. Such walls originally ...
    • Relation:
      https://repository.publisso.de/resource/frl:6471898; https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-020-01059-5
    • Accession Number:
      10.1007/s12520-020-01059-5
    • Online Access:
      https://repository.publisso.de/resource/frl:6471898
      https://doi.org/10.1007/s12520-020-01059-5
    • Rights:
      https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    • Accession Number:
      edsbas.60573C57