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Stone-age colony discovered at Lake Bracciano (9,000 Year Old Canoe)
Archaeo News ^ | 22 October 2005

Posted on 10/24/2005 3:34:36 PM PDT by nickcarraway

In early August, underwater archaeologists excavating at Lake Bracciano, north of Rome (Italy), brought up a nine meter-long dugout canoe hewn from a massive oak trunk. Some 9,000 years old, buried under three meters of mud and eight meters of water, this was the fourth canoe excavated at a Neolithic colony discovered near the shores of Anguillara in 1989.

Unique in Neolithic archaeology, no other sites have been discovered in central Italy, and never at the bottom of a lake. It is located in La Marmotta Bay, at the foot of Anguillara's promontory. Discovered under unusual circumstances in 1989, when the Rome water authority (ACEA) began installing an aqueduct in Lake Bracciano to supplement the city's water supply. When it started using machinery to dig a trench along the lake bottom, an archaeologist was required by law to monitor proceedings. In April, he arrived at the site to find that the dredger was bringing up large pieces of wood and ordered the work to stop immediately.

Archaeologists were aware that prehistoric settlements existed at Lake Bracciano. On the opposite side, near Vicarello, archeologist Antonietta Fugazzola Delpino, director of the Pigorini National Museum of Prehistory and Ethnography in Rome, had already discovered, in the mid-1970s, a bronze-age site from the second millennium BCE. To her excitement, along with the wood in the mud she found ceramic pottery with distinctive decorations made with cockleshells, known to archaeologists as Cardial pottery, dating from the early Neolithic period, thousands of years before the Bronze Age.

During the summer of 1989, Fugazzola and her team of divers began picking through the mud, revealing huge posts and roof timbers, a variety of utensils and ceramics. Some pottery was painted with red, black or white parallel lines, never before found in central Italy, but widely used in Greece during the early Neolithic period. The divers also found pots that were still full of plant remains, extraordinarily well preserved. Excavations have since taken place every summer. A large, rich village has been discovered, established by settlers coming to central Italy from Greece or the Near East. The settlement survived for some four centuries before it was abandoned, suddenly and mysteriously about 5,230 BCE. Supposition is that the inhabitants arrived by boat, paddling up the Arrone River (its source is at Lake Bracciano) from the Mediterranean, carrying their domesticated animals, seeds and plants. They found an ideal land rich for cultivation, forests and the clear freshwater of the lake.

The village covered more than two hectares. The 3,000 oak posts uncovered so far give an idea of the scale of the place. Rectangular dwellings were supported by the posts. Divers uncovered layers of collapsed roof timbers and walls when they reached the floors they found the remains of human life: ceramic pots containing five different kinds of wheat and barley. Some still contained the remains of stewed grain and bones from different animals. Found were a large variety of utensils: greenstone axes, wooden-handled sickles with blades of flint, and obsidian, used as knife blades and believed to have come from either the Aeolian Islands off Sicily or the island of Ponza off the coast of Lazio.

These artifacts reveal that La Marmotta wasn't an isolated outpost on the Neolithic frontier. Fugazzola believes that the people were in touch with other communities in the Mediterranean; La Marmotta may even have been a crossroads for trade. The tree rings in the house posts that the village lasted for more than 400 years have established it. By combining tree-ring chronology with carbon dates for each post, its history is fixed from around 5,690 to 5,230 BCE.

Judging by what was left behind, the village was abandoned suddenly. Whether by tidal wave, fire or whatever the reason, it transformed La Marmotta into a ghost town subsequently engulfed by Lake Bracciano and covered with preserving sediment. Since the sixth millennium BCE the water level in the Lake has risen more than eight meters. At the Pigorini Museum in Rome there is an exhibition of fascinating photographs and graphic descriptions of the underwater excavations at La Marmotta. Many of the artifacts brought to the surface are on permanent display, including the dugout canoe discovered in 1994, a votive statuette representing the earth mother, and a typical Neolithic house, with various cooking pots and utensils, is reproduced in full size.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: alps; archaeology; godsgravesglyphs; history; italy; lakebracciano; lamarmottabay; neolithic; rchaeology
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1 posted on 10/24/2005 3:34:39 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Interesting.

By the way, the article says the canoe is 9,000 years old, but the dates for the village don't seem to match that. Is the canoe from an earlier time than the village?


2 posted on 10/24/2005 3:43:58 PM PDT by Rocky (Air America: Robbing the poor to feed the Left)
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To: nickcarraway
Fabulous! Nautical archaeology bump!
3 posted on 10/24/2005 3:45:06 PM PDT by civis ("Paging Hillaire Belloc!")
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To: nickcarraway

Wow...400+ years and then..."Poof! No more town."

Just amazing. Great post.


4 posted on 10/24/2005 3:46:28 PM PDT by Khurkris (Ain't life funny?)
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To: Rocky

Good eye, Rocky.


5 posted on 10/24/2005 3:46:29 PM PDT by civis ("Paging Hillaire Belloc!")
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To: nickcarraway

Was there the skeleton of a news babe who had been reporting the flood sitting in it? LOL.


6 posted on 10/24/2005 3:50:22 PM PDT by lexington minuteman 1775
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To: Rocky

If the village was from around 6,000 years B.C. , and we are living 2,000 A.D.; that is only 8,000 years ago not 9,000. Where did the extra thousand years come from?


7 posted on 10/24/2005 3:51:39 PM PDT by USConstitutionBuff
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To: USConstitutionBuff

new math...


8 posted on 10/24/2005 3:53:54 PM PDT by Mr. K (Some days even my lucky rocketship underpants don't help...)
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To: nickcarraway; blam
blam!

FMCDH(BITS)

9 posted on 10/24/2005 4:05:13 PM PDT by nothingnew (I fear for my Republic due to marxist influence in our government. Open eyes/see)
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To: nickcarraway; SunkenCiv

Very interesting. Underwater (lake) prehistoric village found in Italy.


10 posted on 10/24/2005 4:09:13 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (Understand islam understand evil - read THE LIFE OF MUHAMMAD free pdf see link My Page)
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To: lexington minuteman 1775

Poor canoe guy, he missed the ark, and look what happened to him!


11 posted on 10/24/2005 4:09:43 PM PDT by aShepard
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To: SunkenCiv

Ping!


12 posted on 10/24/2005 4:09:48 PM PDT by NYer (“Socialism is the religion people get when they lose their religion")
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To: USConstitutionBuff

The story isn't complete. They still haven't explained the three somewhat huge ancient pyramids in Italy. A lot was happening in Italy way back when. There are ancient ruins all over Europe that they don't have any idea who built. A few clues here and there like Cheddar Man and Otze, but not enough to tie it all together. At least they didn't call the canoe a religious artifact.


13 posted on 10/24/2005 4:17:10 PM PDT by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: aShepard
Call Canoe Girl!


14 posted on 10/24/2005 4:22:23 PM PDT by Charles Henrickson (Fake but accurate.)
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To: nickcarraway; nothingnew; SunkenCiv

15 posted on 10/24/2005 4:26:33 PM PDT by blam
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To: USConstitutionBuff

A day is as a thousand years and a thousand years is like a day. So what if one day is missing? LOL


16 posted on 10/24/2005 4:32:01 PM PDT by fish hawk (I am only one, but I am not the only one.)
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To: aShepard
he missed the ark

How long can you tread water?

OK, I'm showing my age...

17 posted on 10/24/2005 4:34:13 PM PDT by NoCmpromiz (What part of John 14:6 don't you get?)
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To: NoCmpromiz
I get it...

The LP in the school library was old when I heard it...in 1981.

Waiting for

"What's an LP?"

18 posted on 10/24/2005 4:36:12 PM PDT by ExGeeEye (WW2 was NOT lost the day we DIDN'T take Berlin.)
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To: nickcarraway
Italy has lots of gorgeous lakes like this:


19 posted on 10/24/2005 4:36:51 PM PDT by FormerACLUmember
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To: nickcarraway

Shhhhhhhhh......
Don't tell anyone. But my daughter, a geologist, tells me it is EASY to "make" a fossil in a lab and they DO pass all the tests.


20 posted on 10/24/2005 4:44:38 PM PDT by buffyt (America will never seek a permission slip to defend the security of our people. Pres. George Bush)
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