Submerged Bronze Age Village Discovered

News August 31, 2015

(University of Geneva)
SHARE:
Bronze Age Village Submerged
(University of Geneva)

ATHENS, GREECE—Last year, underwater archaeologists conducting training off a beach near Athens in anticipation of searching for Neolithic sites were surprised to discover the well-preserved remains of a Bronze Age Greek village. Spero News reports that this summer a Greco-Swiss team returned to the settlement and made a thorough survey of the site. Dating to the third millennium B.C., the remains include stone defensive structures that University of Geneva archaeologist Julien Beck says are of a “massive nature, unknown in Greece until now.” The team also recorded paved surfaces that could be streets and three structures that could be the remains of towers. More than 6,000 artifacts have been recovered, including red ceramics and obsidian blades of a type that dates to between 3200 and 2050 B.C. Future work at the site is expected to give researchers a new look at how coastal settlements interacted with one another during the Bronze Age. To read about a massive Minoan site dating this time, go to “The Minoans of Crete.” 

  • Features July/August 2015

    In Search of a Philosopher’s Stone

    At a remote site in Turkey, archaeologists have found fragments of the ancient world’s most massive inscription

    Read Article
    (Martin Bachmann)
  • Letter from Virginia July/August 2015

    Free Before Emancipation

    Excavations are providing a new look at some of the Civil War’s earliest fugitive slaves—considered war goods or contraband—and their first taste of liberty

    Read Article
    (Library of Congress)
  • Artifacts July/August 2015

    Gold Lock-Rings

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Amgueddfa Cymru-National Museum of Wales)
  • Digs & Discoveries July/August 2015

    A Spin through Augustan Rome

    Read Article
    (Courtesy and created at the Experiential Technologies Center, UCLA, ©Regents of the University of California)