Javascript must be enabled to continue!
A PRELIMINARY REPORT OF EXCAVATIONS IN FEWET, LIBYAN SAHARA
View through CrossRef
In 1997, the .Joint Italian-Libyan Archaeological Mission in the Akakus and Messak (Libyan Sahara)., presently directed by Savino di Lernia, started a program of historical archaeology aimed at recovering remains of the Garamantian period, ca 800 BC to 350 AD. One of the selected sites is Fewet, a small but well nucleated oasis some 10 km SW of Ghat. After a first sounding in 2001, part of the settlement was excavated in 2002-2003, and the adjacent necropolis was surveyed in 2003. The excavated settlement is a rounded compound, with a perimeter wall of stones and mud bricks and a series of small dwelling units, with partition walls in mud bricks, around a central empty space and a communal well. One half of the compound is well preserved, with smashed pottery and remains of carbonized seeds and basketry on the sandy floors. The site is radiocarbon dated to the 2nd-1st centuries BC. The necropolis, including ca 1000 tumuli (but the survey is not yet complete) extends over the entire course of Garamantian history, about one millennium or more, and the typological development - from conical to drum-shaped tumuli - is confirmed by the associated pottery from Final Pastoral to Post-Garamantian times. The site of Fewet provides a good example of a small rural settlement at the SW border of the Garamantian kingdom, and the entire research project (geology and palaeo-environmental studies, archaeological excavation and survey) helps to figure out the life and the material culture in a small Saharan oasis of the proto-historical period.
Title: A PRELIMINARY REPORT OF EXCAVATIONS IN FEWET, LIBYAN SAHARA
Description:
In 1997, the .
Joint Italian-Libyan Archaeological Mission in the Akakus and Messak (Libyan Sahara).
, presently directed by Savino di Lernia, started a program of historical archaeology aimed at recovering remains of the Garamantian period, ca 800 BC to 350 AD.
One of the selected sites is Fewet, a small but well nucleated oasis some 10 km SW of Ghat.
After a first sounding in 2001, part of the settlement was excavated in 2002-2003, and the adjacent necropolis was surveyed in 2003.
The excavated settlement is a rounded compound, with a perimeter wall of stones and mud bricks and a series of small dwelling units, with partition walls in mud bricks, around a central empty space and a communal well.
One half of the compound is well preserved, with smashed pottery and remains of carbonized seeds and basketry on the sandy floors.
The site is radiocarbon dated to the 2nd-1st centuries BC.
The necropolis, including ca 1000 tumuli (but the survey is not yet complete) extends over the entire course of Garamantian history, about one millennium or more, and the typological development - from conical to drum-shaped tumuli - is confirmed by the associated pottery from Final Pastoral to Post-Garamantian times.
The site of Fewet provides a good example of a small rural settlement at the SW border of the Garamantian kingdom, and the entire research project (geology and palaeo-environmental studies, archaeological excavation and survey) helps to figure out the life and the material culture in a small Saharan oasis of the proto-historical period.
Related Results
ANIMAL EXPLOITATION AND POTTERY TECHNOLOGY DURING PASTORAL TIMES: THE EVIDENCE FROM UAN TELOCAT, LIBYAN SAHARA
ANIMAL EXPLOITATION AND POTTERY TECHNOLOGY DURING PASTORAL TIMES: THE EVIDENCE FROM UAN TELOCAT, LIBYAN SAHARA
The combination of artefactual with economic evidence of pastoralism in the Central Sahara, based on the recent excavations at Uan Telocat, a Pastoral site in the Tadrart Acacus, L...
Megalakes in the Sahara? A Review
Megalakes in the Sahara? A Review
AbstractThe Sahara was wetter and greener during multiple interglacial periods of the Quaternary, when some have suggested it featured very large (mega) lakes, ranging in surface a...
The Emergence of Mobile Pastoral Elites during the Middle to Late Holocene in the Sahara
The Emergence of Mobile Pastoral Elites during the Middle to Late Holocene in the Sahara
Abstract
Different emphases on ideological, socio-economic and technological changes have been brought to bear on the cultural variability made materially manifest in pre-Iron Age ...
Oeuvrecatalogus
Oeuvrecatalogus
AbstractThe seventeenth-century, probably Flemish, artist Abraham Casembroot (Bruges? before or in Ι593 - Messina Ι658) spent the latter half of his life in Sicily. His entire exta...
Unpublished Middle Minoan and Late Minoan I material from the 1962–3 excavations at Palaikastro, East Crete (PK VIII)
Unpublished Middle Minoan and Late Minoan I material from the 1962–3 excavations at Palaikastro, East Crete (PK VIII)
Results of excavations in 1962–3 at the Minoan coastal town of Palaikastro were published in theAnnualin 1965 and 1970, asPK VIandPK VII. While those publications did report on all...
Environment and settlements in the Mid-Holocene palaeo-oasis of Wadi Tanezzuft (Libyan Sahara)
Environment and settlements in the Mid-Holocene palaeo-oasis of Wadi Tanezzuft (Libyan Sahara)
Past research in the Acacus mountains has been mostly concerned with studies of rock art (Mori 1965) and site-oriented investigations, particularly rock-shelters in the central and...
Excavations at Kato Phana, Chios: 1999, 2000, and 2001
Excavations at Kato Phana, Chios: 1999, 2000, and 2001
This article presents a preliminary report on the excavation campaigns of 1999 to 2001 conducted in the Sanctuary of Apollo Phanaios at Kato Phana on Chios by the 20th Ephorate of ...
Archaeological research in the Petra Valley: preliminary remarks from the excavation at the Corinthian Tomb
Archaeological research in the Petra Valley: preliminary remarks from the excavation at the Corinthian Tomb
Archaeological research in the Petra Valley: preliminary remarks from the excavation at the Corinthian Tomb
The Italian Archaeological Mission ‘Medieval Petra’: archaeology o...