Prastio-Mesorotsos expedition concluded

Date:

Share post:

The Ministry of Communications and Works, Department of Antiquities, announces the completion of the 2012 archaeological investigations at the site of Prastio-Mesorotsos in the Paphos district.

Prastio-Mesorotsos expedition concluded
Excavations at Prastio-Mesorotsos [Credit: Mesorotsos.com]

According to a Ministry of Communications and Works press release issued here on Saturday, from June 23 to July 28 a team led by CAARI Director and Fellow of the School of History, Classics and Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh conducted the fifth season of excavations at this multi-period site.

The site is extremely long-lived, with evidence of nearly continuous occupation from the Neolithic period to modern day.

This year investigations focused on the Neolithic, Chalcolithic, Early and Middle Bronze Ages as well as the Late Roman and Byzantine periods. The extraordinary depth of deposits shows a great deal of continuity over time, suggesting social, technological and economic adaptation by the local inhabitants throughout prehistory and into the historical periods.

Particularly noteworthy is a sequence of superimposed buildings and activity areas dating from the Aceramic Neolithic period and continuing into the Chalcolithic and Bronze Ages.

An infant burial in a domestic context dating to the Early Bronze Age shows evidence of the funerary customs of the inhabitants.

The site developed into a very sophisticated culture in the Middle Bronze Age before its complete abandonment at the beginning of the Late Bronze Age, when there is evidence in the region for abandonment of the rural countryside and the establishment of an urban center at Palaipaphos.

The site was reoccupied from the Iron Age onward and in 2012 area of the site was excavated to show a deep sequence of Late Roman and Byzantine activity. The local inhabitants at this inland site seem to have been very resilient to the periodic disruptions that affected coastal centres, so there is good potential to reveal a long sequence of Byzantine rural habitation and activity.

Source: Famagusta Gazette [September 29, 2012]

ADVERTISEMENT

spot_img

Related articles

Mexico asks France to cancel pre-Columbian art sales

The Mexican embassy in Paris on Thursday asked France to cancel two planned auctions of pre-Columbian art, saying...

Aztec allies ritually disfigured captured Spaniards’ remains

New research suggests an Aztec-allied town ceremonially disfigured the bodies of captive Spaniards during one of the worst...

Roman highway uncovered between Antwerp and West Flanders

Archaeological excavations in Adegem near Maldegem, West Flanders, have uncovered traces of a Roman road linking Antwerp to...

New analysis provides more clues about Pilgrim-era shipwreck

In 1626, a ship foundered in stormy seas and wrecked on Cape Cod, where the passengers were aided...

Excavations reveal Sidon’s forgotten past

Excavations led by a delegation from the British Museum at the Freres’ archaeological site in the old city...

Micro-sanctuaries key to survival of wildlife in human-dominated landscapes

A new study by a team of researchers from the Centre for Ecological Sciences at the Indian Institute...

1st century shipwreck found off Croatia’s Molat island

A shipwreck dating back to the 1st century AD has been discovered in the sea near the island...

Analysis of grinding tools reveals plant, pigment and bone processing in Neolithic northern Saudi Arabia

In recent years, studies have revealed that the now-arid region of northern Arabia was once much wetter and...