Long-term interactions between the Roman city of Ostia and
its paleomeander, Tiber Delta, Italy
Long-term interactions between the Roman city of Ostia and
its paleomeander, Tiber Delta, Italy
This study examines the long term interactions between the well-known Roman city of Ostia and a river meander. Located at the mouth of the Tiber River, Ostia was a major harbor city that connected Rome to the Mediterranean Sea. Based on aerial photography and boreholes analysis, the paleodynamics of the Fiume Morto’s paleomeander are understood to be linked to the urban evolution of the city of Ostia. Four periods of evolution have been identified as a result of this interdisciplinary work: (1) the foundation of Ostia’s urban center, in the 4th – 3rd century BC, occurred when the meander already existed; (2) between the 4th century BC and the 3rd century AD, human/environmental interactions contributed to the compound growing of the meander which possibly eroded an important Roman road linking Ostia to Rome; (3) from the Imperial period until the meander was cut off in AD 1557-1562, the constricted meander channel at the apex led to the stability of the downstream river channel; (4) the cut off of the paleomeander was completed in 1562, leading to the filling of the paleochannel. These successive phases of channel evolution mark changing fluvial risks from the Roman period to today.
alluvial geoarchaeology, landscape evolution, paleomeander, ostia, tiber delta
1-15
Salomon, Ferreol
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Goiran, Jean-Philippe
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Pannuzi, Simona
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Djerbi, Hatem
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Rosa, Carlo
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Salomon, Ferreol
728f3798-6cd0-45eb-bd09-25ea7159769e
Goiran, Jean-Philippe
0cae676a-890b-4b79-addf-85bc2ef7f8f1
Pannuzi, Simona
bd78d0a5-0a2e-4ac7-ba2c-220febf9ae30
Djerbi, Hatem
84ff645d-b75b-4c78-adf2-1f551d0cb52c
Rosa, Carlo
9e2e088d-100b-4614-bed5-e19170ffc32d
Salomon, Ferreol, Goiran, Jean-Philippe, Pannuzi, Simona, Djerbi, Hatem and Rosa, Carlo
(2016)
Long-term interactions between the Roman city of Ostia and
its paleomeander, Tiber Delta, Italy.
Geoarchaeology, .
(doi:10.1002/gea.21589).
Abstract
This study examines the long term interactions between the well-known Roman city of Ostia and a river meander. Located at the mouth of the Tiber River, Ostia was a major harbor city that connected Rome to the Mediterranean Sea. Based on aerial photography and boreholes analysis, the paleodynamics of the Fiume Morto’s paleomeander are understood to be linked to the urban evolution of the city of Ostia. Four periods of evolution have been identified as a result of this interdisciplinary work: (1) the foundation of Ostia’s urban center, in the 4th – 3rd century BC, occurred when the meander already existed; (2) between the 4th century BC and the 3rd century AD, human/environmental interactions contributed to the compound growing of the meander which possibly eroded an important Roman road linking Ostia to Rome; (3) from the Imperial period until the meander was cut off in AD 1557-1562, the constricted meander channel at the apex led to the stability of the downstream river channel; (4) the cut off of the paleomeander was completed in 1562, leading to the filling of the paleochannel. These successive phases of channel evolution mark changing fluvial risks from the Roman period to today.
Text
Geoarchaeology_Palaeomeander of Ostia.pdf
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 30 November 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 October 2016
Keywords:
alluvial geoarchaeology, landscape evolution, paleomeander, ostia, tiber delta
Organisations:
Archaeology
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 401334
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/401334
ISSN: 0883-6353
PURE UUID: c330b9e8-16ee-4406-b90c-342ca753ecdf
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Date deposited: 17 Oct 2016 09:08
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:57
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Contributors
Author:
Ferreol Salomon
Author:
Jean-Philippe Goiran
Author:
Simona Pannuzi
Author:
Hatem Djerbi
Author:
Carlo Rosa
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