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Keywords = Trieste Karst

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27 pages, 12992 KB  
Article
The Use of Stone Resources in the Roman Architecture of Oderzo (Treviso, Italy)
by Chiara Girotto, Simone Dilaria, Caterina Previato, Jacopo Bonetto and Claudio Mazzoli
Heritage 2025, 8(2), 44; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage8020044 - 24 Jan 2025
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 3277
Abstract
This paper presents the results of the analyses conducted on 46 stone samples collected from Roman buildings in Oderzo, a small town located in the heart of the eastern Venetian plain (29 samples), and from architectural artifacts preserved at the local archeological museum [...] Read more.
This paper presents the results of the analyses conducted on 46 stone samples collected from Roman buildings in Oderzo, a small town located in the heart of the eastern Venetian plain (29 samples), and from architectural artifacts preserved at the local archeological museum “Eno Bellis” (17 samples). The aim of this study is to identify the types and provenance of the stones used for architectural purposes in Roman times in the city of Oderzo (ancient Opitergium). All the materials were petrographically characterized using a multi-analytical approach, including polarized light optical microscopy (PLM). Moreover, volcanic rock samples were analyzed via X-ray fluorescence (XRF) and quantitative phase analysis via X-Ray powder diffraction (QPA-XRPD) to obtain more detailed mineralogical and geochemical characterizations. These methods proved valuable for better determining the provenance of the materials. The results allowed us to determine the quarrying areas that Opitergium mostly relied upon in antiquity for sourcing building materials, as well as the stone trade networks in which the city was integrated. Preliminary findings indicate a higher frequency of stones sourced from outcrops along the Prealpine Arc of north-eastern Italy and Istria, including Aurisina limestone (Trieste Karst), and micritic limestones possibly quarried in the Istrian peninsula for architectural artifacts. Conversely, lithotypes from north-western Prealps appear to have been used less frequently. The volcanic rock samples were entirely sourced from various quarry sites in the Euganean Volcanic District in the Veneto region. Full article
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25 pages, 10086 KB  
Article
Continuity and Innovation in Pottery Technology: The Karst Region (North-East Italy) from Neolithic to Early Bronze Age
by Federico Bernardini, Manuela Montagnari Kokelj, Matteo Velicogna, Nicolò Barago, Davide Lenaz, Angelo De Min and Elena Leghissa
Heritage 2024, 7(6), 2959-2983; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage7060139 - 4 Jun 2024
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 3483
Abstract
This paper explores the development of pottery technology in the Trieste Karst region (North-East Italy) from the Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age (EBA). It also seeks to identify cultural links with other areas by examining potentially imported vessels. Archaeometric analyses (X-ray diffraction [...] Read more.
This paper explores the development of pottery technology in the Trieste Karst region (North-East Italy) from the Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age (EBA). It also seeks to identify cultural links with other areas by examining potentially imported vessels. Archaeometric analyses (X-ray diffraction and optical microscopy) reveal significant differences between Neolithic ceramics (Danilo–Vlaška Group) and the majority of Late Copper Age (LCA)/Early Bronze Age (EBA) pottery (primarily associated with the Ljubljana Culture and a few with the Cetina Culture). Neolithic pottery displays consistent characteristics across all vessel types, including coarse grain, prevalent sparry calcite temper, and the absence of grog. In contrast, most LCA and EBA vessels exhibit distinct features such as very fine-grained paste, no sparry calcite, notable use of grog temper, higher quartz, muscovite, and flint content. Notably, from a technological perspective, the analyzed Cetina vessels bear a strong resemblance to the majority of LCA ceramics. The differences between Neolithic and LCA/EBA vessels clearly suggest the use of new raw materials, recipes, and techniques, likely reflecting changes in cultural and social contexts and potential connections with the core area of the Ljubljana Culture. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Archaeological Heritage)
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12 pages, 8886 KB  
Article
Late-Quaternary Evolution of the Semi-Confined Alluvial Megafan of Isonzo River (Northern Adriatic): Where the Fluvial System of the Southern Alps Meets the Karst
by Livio Ronchi, Alessandro Fontana, Ana Novak, Annamaria Correggiari and Sašo Poglajen
Geosciences 2023, 13(5), 135; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences13050135 - 7 May 2023
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3413
Abstract
The evolution of alluvial megafans has mainly been investigated in unconfined settings; however, at the boundary of these large depositional systems, the development of fluvial channels can be affected by structural constraints with regional extent. Here we present the study of the eastern [...] Read more.
The evolution of alluvial megafans has mainly been investigated in unconfined settings; however, at the boundary of these large depositional systems, the development of fluvial channels can be affected by structural constraints with regional extent. Here we present the study of the eastern sector of the megafan of Isonzo River, in the Gulf of Trieste, where this system fed through the southern Alps is constrained by the Karst and Istria cliffs. Although this area is now submerged under the northern Adriatic Sea, stratigraphy from seismo-acoustic profiles, drill cores and multi-beam bathymetry allows us to reconstruct the paleochannel system of the Isonzo River in detail, which was likely active within the period of 21–17.5 ka cal BP, at the end of LGM. This was reconstructed for over 50 km and currently represents the longest abandoned fluvial channel in the Mediterranean seabed. The occurrence of the mountain fringe and competition with nearby alluvial systems forced the paleochannel to follow the present coastline and conditioned the slope of its thalweg to decrease almost to null, resulting the transformation from the megafan to the undifferentiated alluvial plain. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sedimentology, Stratigraphy and Palaeontology)
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23 pages, 10969 KB  
Article
Rediscovering the Lost Roman Landscape in the Southern Trieste Karst (North-Eastern Italy): Road Network, Land Divisions, Rural Buildings and New Hints on the Avesica Road Station
by Federico Bernardini
Remote Sens. 2023, 15(6), 1506; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15061506 - 8 Mar 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 3940
Abstract
An interdisciplinary study of the ancient landscape of the Trieste Karst (north-eastern Italy) is presented in this paper. Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) has been applied to obtain high-resolution topography of the 25 km2 investigated area in order to identify potential archaeological anomalies. [...] Read more.
An interdisciplinary study of the ancient landscape of the Trieste Karst (north-eastern Italy) is presented in this paper. Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) has been applied to obtain high-resolution topography of the 25 km2 investigated area in order to identify potential archaeological anomalies. The ALS-derived high-resolution Digital Terrain Models have been visualized and managed using QGIS and Relief Visualization Toolbox. Possible archaeological anomalies have been verified through field surveys and interpreted using a multidisciplinary approach mainly based on the collection of associated archaeological materials and geomorphological and stratigraphic evidence. From a methodological perspective, the elaboration and study of ALS-derived images, and in particular the local relief model visualization, combined with the collection of Roman shoe hobnails, have proven to be effective approaches for the certain identification and dating of Roman roads in karst environments. The obtained results have revealed an almost completely unknown Roman landscape: the investigated area was crossed by important public roads, whose layout has been accurately reconstructed for a total length of over 10 km, and occupied by large country estates, sometimes enclosed within boundary walls perfectly fitting the Roman land division grid. One of the identified buildings could correspond to a road station, perhaps the Avesica known from ancient itinerary documents—i.e., the itinerarium Antonini Augusti—due to its position and proximity to a major road junction. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Remote Sensing in Cultural Heritage Research)
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