GPR Investigation at the Archaeological Site of Le Cesine, Lecce, Italy

Information ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 412
Author(s):  
Emanuele Colica ◽  
Antonella Antonazzo ◽  
Rita Auriemma ◽  
Luigi Coluccia ◽  
Ilaria Catapano ◽  
...  

In this contribution, we present some results achieved in the archaeological site of Le Cesine, close to Lecce, in southern Italy. The investigations have been performed in a site close to the Adriatic Sea, only slightly explored up to now, and where the presence of an ancient Roman harbour is alleged on the basis of remains visible above all under the current sea level. This measurement campaign has been performed in the framework of a short-term scientific mission (STSM) performed in the framework of the European Cost Action 17131 (acronym SAGA), and has been aimed to identify possible points where future localized excavation might and hopefully will be performed in the next few years. Both a traditional elaboration and an innovative data processing based on a linear inverse scattering model have been performed on the data.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur Hrast Essenfelder ◽  
Mattia Amadio ◽  
Stefano Bagli ◽  
Paolo Mazzoli

<p>On the 12<sup>th</sup> of November of 2019, flood levels in the Venice Lagoon have reached the mark of 1.87 metres, the second-highest level since records began in 1923. Although a recurrent problem in Venice, the significance of this event have raise awareness of the issue of coastal inundation hazard in Italy, particularly at the highly vulnerable territory of the regions facing the North Adriatic Sea. Several are the processes that contribute to a costal inundation event. On the short term, processes such as high tide and storm surge events can result in sea levels, potentially triggering devastating impacts on human settlements and activities. On the long term, the land subsidence and mean sea level (MSL) changes are important factors; in fact, in some regions such as Jakarta and Bangkok the land is expected to subside by more than 1 meter, while MSL is expected to rise during the next decades, reaching global mean absolute values ranging from 0.3–0.6m (RCP 2.6) to 0.5–1.1m (RCP 8.5) by the end of the century. The combined effect of global sea level rise, local subsidence, and short term phenomena can potentially increase the frequency and intensity of extreme sea levels (ESL), posing a major threat to coastal areas. Currently, almost 700 million people live in low-lying coastal areas, and about 13% of them are exposed to a 100-year flood. In Italy, a territory that is highly vulnerable to coastal flooding are the Regions facing the North Adriatic Sea, mainly due to two factors: the morphological characteristic of this territory, characterised by low-lying areas, and the bathymetry and shape of the Adriatic basin, which cause water level to accumulate and increase rapidly during storm surge events, especially during winter. In this paper, we evaluate two different coastal inundation modelling techniques, one hydrostatic (as part of the EIT Climate-KIC SaferPLACES project) and another hydrodynamic (the ANUGA model), by stressing the models with different ESL, both for the historical mean sea level and for MSL projections at 2050 and 2100. The two different inundation models are tested on three pilot sites particularly vulnerable to coastal flooding located in the North Adriatic Sea: Venice, Cesenatico, and Rimini. We compare our modelling results with existing hazard records and previous hazard and risk assessments. Finally, we apply a flood damage model developed for Italy to estimate the potential economic damages linked to the different flood scenarios, and we calculate the change in expected annual damages according to the relative extreme sea levels.</p>


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michal Kowalewski ◽  
◽  
Kristopher M. Kusnerik ◽  
Daniele Scarponi ◽  
Fabio Trincardi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alessandra Lanzoni ◽  
Anna Del Ben ◽  
Edy Forlin ◽  
Federica Donda ◽  
Massimo Zecchin

<p>The Adriatic basin represents one of several restricted basins located in the Mediterranean Area. It consists of the foreland of three different orogenic belts: the Dinarides to the East, active during the Eocene, the Southern Alps to the North, active since the Cretaceous time, and the Apennines to the West, active since the Paleogene. The Apennines had a primary role during the Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC), conditioning the connection between the Adriatic basin, the Ionian basin, and the proto-Tyrrhenian basin. During the Messinian, the present Adriatic Sea was characterized by shallow water domains, where gypsum evaporites initially deposited and often successively incised or outcropped. </p><p>In the past 50 years, a massive dataset, composed of 2D multichannel seismic data and boreholes, was collected, covering almost the whole Adriatic basin in the Italian offshore. In this work, we interpreted the Plio-Quaternary base (PQb), based on available public datasets and on seismic profiles present in literature, which provided regional information from the northernmost Trieste Gulf (Northern Adriatic Sea) to the Otranto Channel (Southern Adriatic Sea). Here, we propose the PQb time-structural map, obtained by analyzing more than 600 seismic profiles. The PQb represents both the Messinian erosion and/or the top of the Messinian evaporites. It is characterized by a high-amplitude reflector, commonly called “horizon M” in the old literature. Principal findings concerning the Messinian event are summarized as below: </p><p>-The Northern Adriatic (Gulf of Trieste, Gulf of Venice, Po delta, Kvarner Area) reveals widespread channelized systems produced by the initial decrease of the sea level, followed by subaerial erosion, related to further sea level decrease. High-grade erosion involved the nearby Adriatic carbonate platform in the Croatian offshore, where deep valleys, filled with Last Messinian or post- Messinian sediments, cut through the limestones.</p><p>-The Central Adriatic (from the Po delta to the Gargano Promontory) displays a higher evaporites accumulation than the northern sector. Meanwhile, the Mid-Adriatic Ridge was already developing, along with the Apennine Chain, which was in a westernmost position. Erosional features in the deeper area are related to channelized systems, which followed the evaporites deposition. Meanwhile, also the Mid-Adriatic Ridge was affected by erosion.</p><p>-The Southern Adriatic (from the Gargano Promontory to the Otranto Channel) is characterized by the Mesozoic Apulia carbonate platform, covered by a thin Cenozoic sequence affected by subaerial erosion or non-deposition. The platform margin and the slope leading to the deepest South Adriatic basin, where a Messinian gypsum layer, also recorded in the Albanian and Croatian offshore, shows a lower level of upper erosion.</p><p>In general, we notice strongly variable thicknesses of the horizon M, which is related to submarine erosion (channels), subaerial erosion (discontinuous surfaces), non-deposition (possible unconformity), and tilting toward the surrounding chains (deepening horizons). In this work, we evaluate these different components from a regional point of view.  </p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Krešimir Ruić ◽  
Jadranka Šepić ◽  
Maja Karlović ◽  
Iva Međugorac

<p>Extreme sea levels are known to hit the Adriatic Sea and to occasionally cause floods that produce severe material damage. Whereas the contribution of longer-period (T > 2 h) sea-level oscillations to the phenomena has been well researched, the contribution of the shorter period (T < 2 h) oscillations is yet to be determined. With this aim, data of 1-min sampling resolution were collected for 20 tide gauges, 10 located at the Italian (north and west) and 10 at the Croatian (east) Adriatic coast. Analyses were done on time series of 3 to 15 years length, with the latest data coming from 2020, and with longer data series available for the Croatian coast. Sea level data were thoroughly checked, and spurious data were removed. </p><p>For each station, extreme sea levels were defined as events during which sea level surpasses its 99.9 percentile value. The contribution of short-period oscillations to extremes was then estimated from corresponding high-frequency (T < 2 h) series. Additionally, for four Croatian tide gauge stations (Rovinj, Bakar, Split, and Dubrovnik), for period of 1956-2004, extreme sea levels were also determined from the hourly sea level time series, with the contribution of short-period oscillations visually estimated from the original tide gauge charts.  </p><p>Spatial and temporal distribution of contribution of short-period sea-level oscillations to the extreme sea level in the Adriatic were estimated. It was shown that short-period sea-level oscillation can significantly contribute to the overall extremes and should be considered when estimating flooding levels. </p>


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