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Eros, mercator and the cultural landscape of Melos in antiquity: The archaeology of the minerals industry of Melos


Eros, mercator and the cultural landscape of Melos in antiquity: The archaeology of the minerals industry of Melos

Paperback by Photos-Jones, Effie; Hall, Alan J

Eros, mercator and the cultural landscape of Melos in antiquity: The archaeology of the minerals industry of Melos

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ISBN:
9780956824011
Publication Date:
31 Dec 2014
Language:
English
Publisher:
Potingair Press
Pages:
262 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
In Stock
Eros, mercator and the cultural landscape of Melos in antiquity: The archaeology of the minerals industry of Melos

Description

The island of Melos in the Cyclades has a rich archaeology having played an important part in prehistory and throughout history. But owing to its unique geology it is also home to a wide array of rocks and minerals which have been exploited since the first human occupation of the island. This book is about the archaeology of the minerals industries of Melos in antiquity. The localities of their extraction and the type of processing they may have been subject to have been reconstructed on the basis of archaeological evidence. At the site of Aghia Kyriaki, SE Melos, there is evidence for large-scale exploitation of alum in the Late Roman period, its processing in large shallow vessels and packaging into amphorae; there is also evidence for the use of geothermal energy there and in neighbouring Palaeochori Bay; there are phreatic explosions near the sulphur mines at Fyrlingos; finally, there are the egkoila of Melos, the rock-cut cavities carved out of the island's ubiquitous white altered volcanic rock which gave rise to its minerals. The ancient texts and epigraphic evidence also take centre stage, depicting the nature of Melian society from the momentous events of 416BC to the Late Roman period. This book will have wide appeal to archaeologists and historians, to geologists and mineralogists and to all those interested in the island or just visiting it.

Contents

Prologue. On tradesmen, bath-attendants and men-in-business; 1. Why earths, and why earths now?; 2. Nature's own material culture on Melos; 3. Earths, the name commonly given by all Greeks...; 4. 'A cluster of niches exploited with tenacity and ingenuity...'; 5. On earths and rock-cut features: the SE Melos Survey (SEMS) methodology; 6. Mining, farming and honouring the dead in SE Melos; 7. A tale of two sites; 8. The archaeology of minerals in SE Melos: facts and hypotheses; 9. From mineralogy to microbiology ...via phenomenology, a return journey

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