Southeast Naxos Survey - 2015
General Information
Record ID
5567
Activity Date
2015
Chronology
Key-words
Type of Operation
Institution
Localisation
Toponym
Naxos
Naxos
Linked Record
2015
Report
Southeast Naxos Survey. Colin Renfrew (Cambridge/BSA) and Michael Boyd (Cambridge/BSA) report on a new phase of the Keros project: archaeological survey of southeast Naxos. The project’s starting point was to analyse the context of the settlement at Dhaskalio on Keros and the Special Deposits at Kavos on Keros in their wider context within the Mikres Kyklades and surrounding islands, following the Keros Island Survey of 2012 and 2013. However, the survey was carried out as a diachronic project, with equal emphasis given to finds of all periods recovered, thus offering as a principal result a detailed record of the extent to which southeast Naxos was occupied from the Early Bronze Age to the present.
Terrain was divided into survey blocks of 16 hectares (400 m x 400 m) which were covered in tracts of one hectare (100 m x 100 m) by survey teams using GPS and walking in lines of 100 m divided into segments of 20 m (Fig. 1). The data observed were used to generate ‘polygons’ of high sherd and artefact densities using an algorithm based on fluctuations in sherd density, the method already used on the Keros Island Survey (Fig. 2). The entire coastline from Volakas at the east to Kalandos at the west was covered. The known site of Panormos was investigated with the participation of Anastasia Angelopoulou. Mapping using remote controlled helicopter was undertaken for the project by the James Herbst (ASCSA) architect of the Corinth Excavations. The geomorphology of the study area, and in particular of the polygons, was studied by Myrsini Gkouma.
Based on preliminary examination of the ceramics, no Neolithic sites were recovered, with sparse indications of the Early Cycladic I period, then abundant finds of the Early Cycladic II period, with fewer traces of the Middle and Later bronze age. Obsidian was frequently observed, but much less often than on Keros. At Spedos particular attention was given to the cemetery and acropolis, where a central building and strong wall, not previously documented, were identified and planned (Figs 3,4). Archaic and Classical material was followed by a strong representation of the Hellenistic period, with two provisionally Hellenistic towers recorded. The later Roman and Byzantine periods were well-represented, particularly by the impressive stronghold at Irokastro near Panormos. The most frequent special finds were hand tools and rubbers made of Naxian emery, but these are not easy to date.
Already it is notable that the prehistoric utilisation of southeast Naxos was intense only during the later Early Bronze Age (at Kalandos, Spedos and Panormos) and that, although there are indications of occupation during the Archaic and Classical periods, it was only in Hellenistic and later times that the area was again more densely populated. Use of the same methodology for the Southeast Naxos Survey as for the previous Keros Island Survey will permit systematic comparison of sherd densities and other parameters. Initial comparison suggests that the density of occupation on Keros in the Early Bronze Age is comparable or greater than on southeast Naxos (even taking out of account the sanctuary at Kavos).
Terrain was divided into survey blocks of 16 hectares (400 m x 400 m) which were covered in tracts of one hectare (100 m x 100 m) by survey teams using GPS and walking in lines of 100 m divided into segments of 20 m (Fig. 1). The data observed were used to generate ‘polygons’ of high sherd and artefact densities using an algorithm based on fluctuations in sherd density, the method already used on the Keros Island Survey (Fig. 2). The entire coastline from Volakas at the east to Kalandos at the west was covered. The known site of Panormos was investigated with the participation of Anastasia Angelopoulou. Mapping using remote controlled helicopter was undertaken for the project by the James Herbst (ASCSA) architect of the Corinth Excavations. The geomorphology of the study area, and in particular of the polygons, was studied by Myrsini Gkouma.
Based on preliminary examination of the ceramics, no Neolithic sites were recovered, with sparse indications of the Early Cycladic I period, then abundant finds of the Early Cycladic II period, with fewer traces of the Middle and Later bronze age. Obsidian was frequently observed, but much less often than on Keros. At Spedos particular attention was given to the cemetery and acropolis, where a central building and strong wall, not previously documented, were identified and planned (Figs 3,4). Archaic and Classical material was followed by a strong representation of the Hellenistic period, with two provisionally Hellenistic towers recorded. The later Roman and Byzantine periods were well-represented, particularly by the impressive stronghold at Irokastro near Panormos. The most frequent special finds were hand tools and rubbers made of Naxian emery, but these are not easy to date.
Already it is notable that the prehistoric utilisation of southeast Naxos was intense only during the later Early Bronze Age (at Kalandos, Spedos and Panormos) and that, although there are indications of occupation during the Archaic and Classical periods, it was only in Hellenistic and later times that the area was again more densely populated. Use of the same methodology for the Southeast Naxos Survey as for the previous Keros Island Survey will permit systematic comparison of sherd densities and other parameters. Initial comparison suggests that the density of occupation on Keros in the Early Bronze Age is comparable or greater than on southeast Naxos (even taking out of account the sanctuary at Kavos).
Author
John BENNET
Bibliographic reference(s)
Unpublished field report, British School at Athens.
Legend :
location of excavation/archaeological operation
location of modern place
polygon of place (AG Online)
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Date of creation
2016-08-29 00:00:00
Last modification
2023-10-31 13:47:03
Picture(s)
Fig. 2/ Southeast Naxos Survey: Survey area, showing number and area of polygons created on the basis of ceramic density.
Fig. 3/ Southeast Naxos Survey: Aerial view of the bay of Spedos, showing the prehistoric acropolis on the west end of the promontory at the summit.