Discovery of a 1st Century AD Roman Amphitheater and Other Structures at the Forum Novum by GPR

Author:

Goodman Dean12345,Piro Salvatore12345,Nishimura Yasushi12345,Patterson Helen12345,Gaffney Vince12345

Affiliation:

1. Geophysical Archaeometry Laboratory, University of Miami Japan Division, Otsubu 39-1, Nakajima Machi, Ishikawa Ken, 929-2222, Japan

2. Consiglio Nazionale Delle Ricerche Istituto per le Technologie Applicate ai Beni Culturali, 00016 Monterondo, SCALO, Rome c.post.10, Italy

3. Nara National Cultural Properties Research Institute, 2-9-1, Nijocho, Nara-shi, 630, Japan

4. British School at Rome, Via Gramsci 61, 00197 Rome (06 32649369)

5. University of Birmingham, Field Archaeology Unit, Birmingham B15-2TT, United Kingdom

Abstract

A Roman marketplace and town called the Forum Novum, initially began construction in the [Formula: see text] century BC and flourished well into the [Formula: see text] century AD. At present most of the town remains is below ground. The site is situated next to a completely restored [Formula: see text] century AD church and a partially reconstructed marketplace. Ground penetrating radar surveys have been conducted at the Forum Novum during 1998 through 2001 field seasons to remotely detect buildings of this ancient town. Using 300 and [Formula: see text] radar antennas and closely spaced radar profiles, time slice and 3-D volume analysis of the reflection data were computed. GPR surveys in the area detected a large oval-shaped structure [Formula: see text] along its major axis. This structure is from a [Formula: see text] century AD Roman amphitheater. Subsequent excavations from one of the eight entrances reveal that the internal amphitheater oval is nearly a meter thick and is composed of a cemented stone wall buried [Formula: see text] below the ground surface. The time slices revealed completely different top layer reflections from structures associated with a destroyed mausoleum, which could also be seen by the naked eye as crop marks. Archaeologists often reconstruct subsurface archaeology based on crop marks. In this case however, radar was able to detect structures near the surface—and a much different set of structures lying deeper using time slice analysis. Other structures detected in the GPR surveys include a large building complex found next to a reconstructed marketplace, and believed to be living quarters adjacent to the central market area. A large Roman villa was also imaged in one area and later excavated to reveal internal walls that include a garden atrium.

Publisher

Environmental and Engineering Geophysical Society

Subject

Geophysics,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology,Environmental Engineering

Reference8 articles.

1. Conyers, L. B. , and D. Goodman, 1997, GPR: An introduction for Archaeologists, ISBN 0-7619-8927-7: Alta Mira Press, Sage Publications.

2. Goodman, D., S. Piro, and Y. Nishimura, 2002, GPR time slice images of the Villa of Emperor Trajanus, Arcinazzo, Italy (AD 52–117): in the 9th International Conference on Ground Penetrating Radar, Steven K. Koppenjan, Lee Jua (ed.), Proceedings of SPIE Vol. 4758, 268–272.

3. Goodman, D., Y. Nishimura, M. Okita, and H. Hongo, 2001, 3-D amplitude rendering of Saitobaru Mound #13, in Filtering, Optimisations and Modelling of Geophysical Data in Archaeological Prospecting: 50th Anniversary Publication of the Fondazione Ing. Carlo Maurilio Lerici Politecnico di Milana, Italy, 93–101.

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