The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Radar reveals ancient Roman city

City planning remarkably co-ordinated

- WILL DUNHAM REUTERS

WASHINGTON — In a glimpse into the future of archeology, researcher­s have used ground-penetratin­g radar to map an entire ancient Roman city, detecting remarkable details of buildings still deep undergroun­d including a temple and a unique public monument.

The technology was used at Falerii Novi, a walled city spanning 30.5 hectares about 50 kilometres north of Rome, researcher­s said.

Falerii Novi was founded in 241 BC during the time of the Roman Republic and was inhabited until around 700 AD in the early Middle Ages.

It marked the first time a complete ancient city was mapped using ground-penetratin­g radar (GPR), which lets researcher­s explore large-scale archeologi­cal sites expeditiou­sly without excavation, which can be costly and time-consuming.

The technology can "see" beneath the surface using a radar antenna that sends a pulsed radio signal into the ground and listens for the echoes bouncing off objects. The GPR equipment was pulled over the surface using an all-terrain vehicle.

"This took one person about three to four months in the field," said Martin Millett, a University of Cambridge classical archaeolog­y professor who helped lead the study published in the journal Antiquity.

"This really does change how we can study and understand Roman towns

— the way of the future for archaeolog­y."

Falerii Novi, not quite half the size of ancient Pompeii, had previously been partially excavated but most remained buried. With a population of perhaps 3,000 people, it boasted an unexpected­ly elaborate public bath complex and market building, at least 60 large houses and a rectangula­r temple with columns near the city's south gate.

Near the north gate was a public monument unlike any other known, with a colonnaded portico on three sides and a large open square measuring 40 by 90 metres. Falerii Novi had a network of water pipes running beneath the city blocks and not just along streets, indicating co-ordinated city planning.

 ?? YARA NARDI • REUTERS ?? Porta di Giove, the main entrance to the ancient Roman city of Falerii Novi, which is mostly buried undergroun­d, is seen after researcher­s announced they were able to map the entire city using ground-penetratin­g radar technology, near Rome, Italy, earlier this month.
YARA NARDI • REUTERS Porta di Giove, the main entrance to the ancient Roman city of Falerii Novi, which is mostly buried undergroun­d, is seen after researcher­s announced they were able to map the entire city using ground-penetratin­g radar technology, near Rome, Italy, earlier this month.
 ?? REUTERS ?? A ground penetratin­g radar map of the newly discovered temple in the ancient Roman city of Falerii Novi in Italy is shown in this image released in May.
REUTERS A ground penetratin­g radar map of the newly discovered temple in the ancient Roman city of Falerii Novi in Italy is shown in this image released in May.

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