Long-Term Settlement Dynamics in Ancient Macedonia: A New Multi-Disciplinary Survey from Grevena (NW Greece)

Author

Apostolou, Giannis

Venieri, Konstantina

Mayoral Pascual, Alfredo

Dimaki, Sofia

Garcia i Molsosa, Arnau

Georgiadis, M. (Mercourios)

Orengo Romeu, Héctor A.

Publication date

2024-10-28



Abstract

This paper discusses the evolution of human settlement in ancient Macedonia from the Neolithic to the Late Roman periods, based on the results of a new multi-disciplinary and multi-scale archaeological survey in northern Grevena (NW Greece). Building upon an unpublished (legacy) survey, we developed a GIS-structured workflow that integrates site-revisiting and surveying strategies (material collection and test pits) with multi-temporal remote-sensing analyses, offering analytical information about site distribution, characterisation, dating, and taphonomy. Notably, the new study led to a 64% increase in the number of known sites. The combined results indicate that prehistory is less represented in the surface record than historical periods, likely due to the impact of soil erosion episodes. The Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age saw increased site numbers and the emergence of a settlement structure that characterised the area until the Hellenistic period. During the Roman period, the pattern shifted from a seemingly limited use of the landscape towards a model of more extensive habitation. This was driven by the appearance of new rural sites that introduced a land-use regime designed to support agricultural intensification by implementing anti-erosion measures, such as field terraces.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

CDU Subject

90 - Archaeology. Prehistory

Subject

Geoarqueologia -- Grècia; Arqueologia del paisatge -- Grècia; Arqueologia -- Sistemes d'informació geogràfica

Pages

28 p.

Publisher

MDPI

Version of

Land, 13(11), 1769

Documents

2024_long_term_settlement_dynamics_ancient_macedonia.pdf

24.46Mb

 

Rights

© 2024 by the authors.

Attribution 4.0 International

© 2024 by the authors.

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