The Origin of Metals from the Roman-Period Levels of a Site in Southern Poland

1993 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-131
Author(s):  
Zofia Anna Stos-Gale
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
ANTTI LAHELMA ◽  
ZBIGNIEW T. FIEMA

The Mountain of Aaron (Jabal Haroun) near the ancient city of Petra, Jordan, is the traditional burial place of the Old Testament prophet and a site considered sacred by the three world religions of Christianity, Judaism and Islam. Since 1997, a Finnish archaelological project has been investigating the mountain through the excavations of a Byzantine pilgramage complex on its high plateau and an intensive survey of its surroundings. In the course of the excavations, it has become clear that the Byzantine structures were preceded by a monumental building, probably a temple of the Nabataean-Roman period. Moreover, already in the pre-Christian period a pilgrim route probablty led from central Petra to Jabal Haroun. The article explores the history and archaeology of Jabal Haroun, which shows a remarkable degree of continuity and opens up the prospect that the local folk tradition may preserve elements of Nabataean religion. Using contemporary rituals and beliefs associated with the mountain as a reference point, we suggest that the pre-Christian 'deity of Jabal Haroun' can be identified as the Nabataean goddess al-'Uzza.


1999 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 353-361 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Large ◽  
Z. Sawłowicz ◽  
J. Spratt

AbstractCobaltite-cemented pyrite framboids are reported from the base of the Kupferschiefer in the Lubin-Sieroszowice mining district in southern Poland. In the framboids, cobaltite occurs interstitial to the pyrite crystals. The cobaltite-cemented framboids are confined to within a few cm either side of the boundary between the Weissliegendes sandstone and the Kupferschiefer laminated organic-rich shales. Textural relations and distribution of the cobaltite is interpreted as indicating that the framboids acted as a site of preferred cobaltite precipitation and that the cobaltite precipitated in response to the changing chemical environment at the Weissliegendes/Kupferschiefer contact. It is proposed that the texture may have formed as a result of desorption of Co and/or As which had been adsorbed onto the monosulphide precursors to the framboidal pyrite. Desorption during the transition to pyrite resulted in cobaltite saturation within the framboid and subsequent precipitation. The source of the Co and As was probably oxyhydroxides which exist in the upper oxic part of the Weissliegendes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 67 (3) ◽  
pp. 433-440m
Author(s):  
Urszula Radwańska
Keyword(s):  

AbstractSmall brachiopods of the families Craniidae Menke, 1828 and Thecidellinidae Elliott, 1958 were selected from the Oxfordian sequence which lies transgressively upon a Variscan rhyodacite laccolite exposed at Zalas in the Cracow Upland, southern Poland, a site which is well-known due to various kinds of ubiquitous fossils. The craniids include three species: Craniscus bipartitus (Münster in Goldfuss, 1837), Craniscus tripartitus (Münster in Goldfuss, 1837) and Craniscus antiquior (Jelly, 1843), and the thecidellinids - two species: Rioultina zalasensis sp. nov. and Rioultina wapiennensis Krawczyński, 2008. The species described herein indicate tropical or subtropical waters, and a moderately (?) deep character of the sea basin at Zalas.


1953 ◽  
Vol 43 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 81-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. K. St. Joseph

This paper, a companion to one printed in vol. XLI of the Journal, describes discoveries made by air reconnaissance during the eight summers 1945–52 in the southern half of Roman Britain. The area concerned, extending from the English Channel to Yorkshire, embraces the whole of the civil district of the province and the highland regions of Wales and the Pennines that were throughout much of the Roman occupation under direct military control (pl. VIII). There is a broad difference, too, in the terrain of these two parts. The civil district corresponds to the lowland zone of Britain, which includes the most fertile soils and to-day the largest proportion of arable land. In Wales and the Pennines grass and moorland predominate. This difference is reflected in the results obtained by air reconnaissance. In the Midlands and the south, structures of the Roman period do not commonly survive above ground in open country, and by far the largest number of new discoveries have come from observation of crop marks, revealing features otherwise hidden. In Wales and the Pennines the aerial camera has recorded military remains, already known as they are visible on the surface as earthworks; and here additions to knowledge have come when such a site happened to be under a cereal crop rather than grass, or when earthworks were seen that escaped previous notice on the ground. The scale of the flying has varied much from one year to another in the period under review. In 1945 and 1946 the flying over southern Britain only amounted to a few hours; there were rather more in 1947, but most of the results here described were obtained in the years 1948–1951. This period included the exceptionally dry summer of 1949, when many features were seen that have not been visible at any other time.


2021 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. 179-195
Author(s):  
N. Platonova ◽  
◽  
T. Zheglova ◽  

Under the mound of sopka no. 4 near the village of Peredolsky Pogost, there were revealed flat-grave burials in small pits and a concentration of pits of an unclear purpose including pillar holes. Some of them were 14С dated to within the interval of the 4th–7th century. The pottery from two of the pits has parallels in the “pre-sopki” antiquities and the culture of the Pskov long barrows. The buried topsoil in this area is almost sterile, but two finds of the Roman period were recovered from the surface of the virgin soil layer. Possibly, the cultural layer was deposited in the course of ritual activities performed in the sacral zone of the burial ground in different epochs.


Author(s):  
Karol Myśliwiec ◽  

The article gives a brief overview of the archaeological evidence for the Ptolemaic phase in the existence of ancient Athribis, a site located in modern Benha in the Nile delta in Egypt. Excavation of the part of the site around Kom Sidi Youssouf revealed a sequence of layers dated as follows: the earliest from the beginning of the Ptolemaic period through the reign of Ptolemy V (a); essentially the reign of Ptolemy VI through the second half of the 2nd century BC (b); and the later Ptolemaic period through the beginning of the Roman period, the latter phase largely disturbed by later activities at the site. The investigated quarter was not settled before the second half of the 4th century BC and later developed into a vibrant workshop quarter producing pottery and terracottas, stone figurines, faience vessels, gold jewelry and sundry other objects. Many of the artifacts, a selection of which is presented in the paper, were most certainly produced as devotional objects for sale and use in the numerous shrines and temples that appear to have existed in this part of the ancient city. The assemblage is characterized by a high quality of execution and iconographic originality, showing that the artists—assumedly Egyptian, Greek and Oriental—reached for the best Hellenistic models for their craftwork.


Gesnerus ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 57 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 238-249
Author(s):  
Valentina Grigorova

The city of Pautalia (Kyustendil in Bulgaria) is located near thermal springs in the Strymon valley (Strouma),on a site occupied from the Iron Age onward by the Thracian tribe of Dentheletes. The temple of Asclepios and the walls of Pautalia, located on the hill of Hissarlaka, as well as the roman thermae in the center of modern Kyustendil are among the more important archaeological vestiges in the area. In 1990, near the village of Dragodan, district of Kyustendil, different surgical instruments in bronze were unearthed in a tumulus attributed to the roman period (Ilnd century A.D.). During the excavation of another tumulus in 1992, a truly exceptional discovery was made near the town of Kotcherinovo, district of Kyustendil: A variety of medicines were discovered in a small bronze case, dating from the roman period (Ilnd century A.D.). The complete results of the analysis of these substances and few hypotheses about their possible use are presented in this publication.


2016 ◽  
Vol 79 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tomasz Konopka ◽  
Anita Szczepanek ◽  
Marcin M. Przybyła ◽  
Piotr Włodarczak

Abstract This study uses anthropological and forensic medical analyses to determine the cause of fractures found in the remains of 15 individuals buried at a site associated with the Globular Amphora Culture (2875-2670 BC). The intent was to determine the mechanism underlying the injuries and to indicate the types of tools that might have inflicted the blows. The fractures were diversified in their forms, but the majority of the injuries appear to have been inflicted by a flint axe, which is frequently found in graves of the Globular Amphora Culture. Apart from the forearm being severed in one of the victims, all the remaining skeletons showed from 1 to 4 injuries involving solely the skulls. The grave might contain victims attacked by invaders who executed the captives, or else the feature is ritual in character and it reflects the beliefs of the Neolithic community.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document