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Archaeological Mineralogy and the Dawn of Gemmology:Prehistoric(7th-5th Millennium BC)Gem Minerals and Gold from the Balkans(South-East Europe) 被引量:1
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作者 Ruslan I.Kostov 《宝石和宝石学杂志》 CAS 2019年第4期25-35,共11页
The territory of the Balkan Peninsula in SE Europe is reviewed, from the point of gemmology, as the cradle of gem and decorative minerals and metals in European prehistory. During the local Neolithic period (end of 7 ... The territory of the Balkan Peninsula in SE Europe is reviewed, from the point of gemmology, as the cradle of gem and decorative minerals and metals in European prehistory. During the local Neolithic period (end of 7 th -6 th millennium BC), as material for tools or for beads, nephrite (with the earliest known Balkan nephrite culture), jadeite-omphacite and quartz (different varieties) were introduced to make pendants and idols. Large quantities of copper and gold artifacts are known since the Chalcolithic period (5 th millennium BC)(unique for the region;the largest in number of gold artifacts is the Varna I Chalcolithic necropolis in Bulgaria). The gemmological materials in the Balkans are known for malachite, antigorite serpentinite, turquoise, rock crystal, carnelian, jasper, jet and obsidian. In the Varna I necropolis (mid 5 th millennium BC) are recorded the first known complex faceted carnelian beads with 32 facets, as well as some of the most important gemmological techniques and procedures such as faceting, tumbling, annealing, miniaturization and standardization. As pigments for pottery, cinnabar, graphite and gold were used in different prehistoric sites. The earliest salt production in the Balkans is known from sites in Romania and Bulgaria, and because of its trade, salt is positively linked to a population rich with prestigious goods. The introduced possible Chalcolithic weight unit “van”(2 carats) is supposed to be the earliest known in prehistoric times. 展开更多
关键词 geoarchaeology gemmology European prehistory NEPHRITE GOLD Balkan Bulgaria south-east EUROPE
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Geomorphological Evolution and Fluvial System Development during the Holocene: The Case of Vouraikos River Evolution in Kalavrita Plain, Northern Peloponnese, Greece
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作者 Leonidas Stamatopoulos Georgios Alevizos Niki Evelpidou 《Journal of Geoscience and Environment Protection》 2018年第1期17-35,共19页
Fluvial geomorphology is affected by physical conditions which allow its adaptation due to high dynamics and environmental influences. Fluvial morphological changes are manifested as a result of tendency of the river ... Fluvial geomorphology is affected by physical conditions which allow its adaptation due to high dynamics and environmental influences. Fluvial morphological changes are manifested as a result of tendency of the river system to maintain its physical balance. Our study area is the upper and middle flow part of Vouraikos river and surrounding area, near the NW border of Chelmos mountain in Northern Peloponnese, near the town of Kalavrita, at an altitude of 800 m. The area is part of the Skepasto basin, constituting of a graben with a general E-W direction that was developed NW of Kalavrita. The area comprises of Mesozoic, Upper Triassic-Jurassic limestone and dolomite of the Tripolitsa unit External Hellenides and Plio-Pleistocene fluvio-lacustrine sequences, while its tectonic structure is characterized mainly by normal faults. The geomorphological landscape is characterized by alluvial deposits and important geomorphological features including fluvial terraces, alluvial fans, fluvial scarps and their main rill washes. This area has been a place of major human activity as shown by the findings of many uncovered artifacts and a settlement. Through a paleographic reconstruction, detailed field investigations, in combination with the compilation of geomorphological maps using GIS software and archaeological evidence found in the area, we attempted to reconstruct the fluvial evolution of Vouraikos river and identify the major geomorphological factors that led to, and influenced it. Finally, the link between cultural activities and sedimentary processes is also studied. The recorded environmental variations had a great impact on the geomorphological shaping and instability of Kalavrita plain and Vouraikos river and are being reflected on the buried settlement. Sediment fluxes were high enough to form strath terraces, while local tectonics aided in the strath and fill terrace creation. Smaller and younger strath terraces, formed during increased sediment supply periods, when the valley was at a higher level. 展开更多
关键词 CLIMATIC Changes geoarchaeology GEOMORPHOLOGY Strath TERRACES Kalavrita PLAIN Vouraikos River
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Synchronous Pumice Mantle Found on Santorini Volcano
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作者 Walter L. Friedrich Richard Wilson +1 位作者 Annette Højen Sørensen Samson Katsipis 《International Journal of Geosciences》 2021年第4期329-346,共18页
It is generally accepted that the vent of the 3.6 ka Minoan eruption was situated in the water-filled Santorini caldera prior to the Minoan eruption. One should therefore expect to find huge quantities of pumice and a... It is generally accepted that the vent of the 3.6 ka Minoan eruption was situated in the water-filled Santorini caldera prior to the Minoan eruption. One should therefore expect to find huge quantities of pumice and ash on the inner side of the caldera walls, but there is only a relatively small amount preserved. An unexpected discovery of remnants of a synchronous pumice mantle of the Minoan eruption appears to solve this enigma. A lengthy period of erosion and the intensive quarrying of pumice for the construction of the Suez Canal (1859 to 1869) led to the removal of an enormous amount of material and information for generations of geologists. The synchronous pumice mantle covered the whole caldera wall from rim to sea level. Archaeological finds under the pumice mantle show that the caldera wall was accessible and inhabited in the Bronze Age. Furthermore, this discovery documents that only one Minoan eruption took place and that the so-called “Lower pumice” does not exist on Santorini. 展开更多
关键词 Minoan Eruption TEPHROCHRONOLOGY Visual Geology geoarchaeology
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Caesarea in Coastal Israel:A Benchmark for Sealevel Changes during the 1st-13th Centuries
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作者 Yossi Mart Natalia Tiulienieva 《Journal of Environmental Science and Engineering(A)》 2019年第1期36-48,共13页
Geodetic measurements of a Roman aqueduct in Caesarea,on the Mediterranean coast of central Israel,show that the massive structure preserved its original gradient of 0.05%in places where it was founded on rock,suggest... Geodetic measurements of a Roman aqueduct in Caesarea,on the Mediterranean coast of central Israel,show that the massive structure preserved its original gradient of 0.05%in places where it was founded on rock,suggesting that that domain has been tectonically stable for the last two millennia.Consequently,since the land was stable,dated archaeological sealevel proxies that recorded their contemporaneous sealevels when the city was active,reflect global sealevel and their variations.The evidence suggests that sealevel was similar to the present some 2,000 years ago,it was nearly 0.5 m higher than the present some 1,300 years ago,and about 0.5 m lower nearly 800 years ago.These measurements match earlier climatological evidence of the early Mediaeval Warm Period and the early stages of the Little Ice Age,respectively.No sealevel evidence was encountered in Caesarea after the collapse of the Crusaders’kingdom. 展开更多
关键词 NEOTECTONIC stability geoarchaeological PROXIES SEALEVEL variations HISTORIC climate CHANGES
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