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An ancient Roman city has been fully mapped using ground-penetrating radar


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An ancient Roman city has been fully mapped using ground-penetrating radar

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Ground-penetrating radar map of the temple in the Roman city of Falerii Novi, Italy.

 

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Falerii Novi was once a walled town just north of Rome, likely founded around 241 BC as a relocation site for a Falisci tribe that had rebelled against the Romans. Located on a

 

volcanic plateau, archaeologists surmise that the new site was chosen because it wasn't as easy to defend, thereby discouraging further uprisings. There were likely some 2,500

 

residents during the third and fourth centuries BC. The ruins are deep underground, but a team of archaeologists from the University of Cambridge and Ghent University in

 

Belgium have used ground-penetrating radar (GPR) to map the complete city. They described their findings in a recent paper in the journal Antiquity.

 

Dating back to 1910, when the first patent for a radar system to locate buried objects was filed, GPR has been used to measure the depth of glaciers, to study bedrock and

 

groundwater, and to locate unexploded land mines, buried sewers, and utility lines, among other applications. The 1972 Apollo 17 mission—the final moon-landing mission of

 

NASA's Apollo program—used a GPR system called the Apollo Lunar Sounder Experiment (ALSE) to record depth information of the lunar surface. The method has also emerged

 

in recent years as a powerful tool for archaeological geophysics, since it is a non-invasive means of detecting and mapping artifacts, features, and key patterns beneath the

 

surface.

 

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GPR is distinct from another popular method, LIDAR, which relies on infrared light from lasers rather than radio waves to map terrain. An electromagnetic pulse is directed into

 

the ground, and any objects or layering (stratigraphy) will be detectable in the reflections picked up by a receiver, just like regular radar. How long it takes for the echoes to return

 

indicates the depth, and different materials will reflect the incoming waves differently. The data can then be plotted to create detailed maps of those underground features.

 

Falerii Novi was first excavated in the 1990s, and over the ensuing decades archaeologists have identified warehouses, shops, market places, a theater, and a forum using various

 

non-invasive techniques, including magnetometry—a method that measures the direction, strength, or relative change of a magnetic field at a given location to reveal details

 

beneath the surface. But the use of GPR by the British and Belgian team has yielded a much more detailed and complete picture of the site, enabling them to study how the town

 

evolved over several hundred years.

 

The authors attached their GPR system to the back of an ATV in order to more efficiently survey the 30.5 hectares (about 75 acres) within the ancient city's walls, taking a reading

 

every 12.5 centimeters. In 2017, using their method, the team found the remains of a large Roman temple, several feet below the town, that would have been roughly the same

 

size as St. Paul's Cathedral.

 

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This latest analysis revealed a large rectangular structure connected to a network of water pipes, leading to the city's aqueduct. The authors surmise that it is the remains of an

 

open-air pool (natatio), part of a large public bathing complex. They were also surprised to see two large structures facing each other within a covered passageway (porticus

 

duplex) that they believe was once part of a large public monument near the city's north gate. It seems to be part of a "sacred topography" of temples around the town's

 

periphery, previously revealed by magnetometer surveys.

 

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GPR works very well in certain conditions, like uniform sandy soils, but the high electrical conductivity of clays and silts, for example, can significantly dampen signal strength. And

 

rocky sediments will scatter the signal, making it more difficult to pick out the patterns in the noise. "At Falerii Novi, the generally dry conditions in the summer months were well-

 

suited to GPR survey," the authors wrote, noting, however, that when it did rain, "up to seven days were needed before the ground was sufficiently dry to yield optimal data

 

quality."

 

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Falerii Novi was a good site to demonstrate the potential of GPR because it is not buried beneath modern buildings, unlike other ancient cities. GPR, particularly when combined

 

with magnetometry, could be a useful tool to study such towns. "Neither [GPR or magnetometry] is able to produce a complete picture of the archaeology," the authors wrote,

 

noting that the shop units of Falerii Novi, for example, show up in the magnetic data but not in the GPR survey. And while the city's theater shows up in the magnetic data, the

 

GPR survey provided a much clearer view, including at different depths, yielding insight into its structural form, as well as evidence of the removal of walls via stone-robbing.

 

 

The biggest challenge going forward is the sheer amount of data produced by this high-resolution mapping. According to the authors, they have collected a whopping 71.7

 

million readings from Falerii Novi, equivalent to 28.68 billion data points, or about 4.5GB of raw data per hectare (2.47 acres). It can take as long as 20 hours to document a single

 

hectare, which is why the team is developing automated techniques to speed up the process with computer-aided object detection.

 

"The astonishing level of detail which we have achieved at Falerii Novi, and the surprising features that GPR has revealed, suggest that this type of survey could transform the way

 

archaeologists investigate urban sites, as total entities," said co-author Martin Millett of the University of Cambridge, adding that it should be possible to use GPR to survey major

 

ancient cities like Miletus in Turkey, or Nicopolis in Greece. "We still have so much to learn about Roman urban life, and this technology should open up unprecedented

 

opportunities for decades to come."

 

 

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