Writ in water—Unwritten histories obtained from carbonate deposits in ancient water systems

Author:

Sürmelihindi Gül1ORCID,Passchier Cees2

Affiliation:

1. School of Archaeology University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. Institute for Geosciences University of Mainz Mainz Germany

Abstract

AbstractCalcium carbonate deposits from ancient water systems such as aqueducts are a hidden archive for archaeology and environmental sciences. These deposits formed wherever carbonate‐rich water was in contact with a water‐containing structure and recorded water composition, temperature, biological content, the operation or nonoperation of a water system segment, flow discharge and velocity, the shape of disappeared segments of water structures, the number of years a water supply system was active, disruptions of the water supply and water management such as repairs, adaptations and cleaning. Indirectly, urban development, resilience, population‐ and socioeconomic dynamics can be studied through the stratigraphy of carbonate in water systems. Carbonate archives can also give insight into long‐term changes in paleoclimate and on environmental pollution, deforestation, extreme floods, droughts, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions. Archaeological and environmental investigations of carbonate deposits can provide data with up to daily resolution over decades to centuries. Although absolute dating of carbonate from water systems is still problematic, each study on the aqueduct of an ancient city, together with its carbonate deposits, provides its own microstory in Roman life.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Archeology,Archeology

Reference246 articles.

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2. Introduction to unsteady open-channel flow

3. Palaeoclimatic records from stable isotopes in riverine tufas: Synthesis and review

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