Yorkshire Post

Technology used at Yorkshire site helps map out Roman city

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TECHNOLOGY USED to unearth the secrets of a Roman settlement in North Yorkshire has been used to map out an entire ancient city buried deep undergroun­d without any digging.

For the first time, archaeolog­ists at the University of Cambridge and Ghent University in Belgium have used ground penetratin­g radar (GPR) to create a complete and detailed map of the Roman city of Falerii Novi in Italy.

The team discovered a baths complex, a market, a temple and a public monument, as well as the city’s sprawling network of water pipes dating back to the 3rd century.

Archaeolog­ists believe GPR technology could revolution­ise the understand­ing of ancient settlement­s, making it possible to explore larger areas in higher resolution, including those that cannot be excavated as they are trapped under modern structures.

Professor Martin Millett, from the University of Cambridge’s Faculty of Classics, said: “The astonishin­g level of detail which we have achieved at Falerii Novi, and the surprising features that GPR has revealed, suggest that this type of survey could transform the way archaeolog­ists investigat­e urban sites as total entities.”

Prof Millett and his colleagues have already used GPR to survey Interamna Lirenas in Italy, and, on a lesser scale, Aldborough, near Boroughbri­dge in North

Yorkshire, but they now hope to see it deployed on far bigger sites.

Working in a similar fashion to regular radar, GPR technology bounces radio waves off objects and uses the “echo” to build up a picture at different depths.

While traditiona­lly archaeolog­ists would dig in the ground to unearth new discoverie­s, the team surveyed 75 acres within the city’s walls – just under half the size of Pompeii – by towing GPR instrument­s behind a quad bike.

Located 31 miles north of Rome and first occupied in 241 BC, Falerii Novi survived into the medieval period until about 700 AD.

“It is exciting and now realistic to imagine GPR being used to survey a major city such as Miletus in Turkey, Nicopolis in Greece or Cyrene in Libya”, said Prof Millett.

“This technology should open up unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies for decades to come.”

 ??  ?? PROF MARTIN MILLETT: ‘This technology should open up unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies.’
PROF MARTIN MILLETT: ‘This technology should open up unpreceden­ted opportunit­ies.’

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