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Ogle Earth: Altinum revealed... and in Google Earth

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Ogle Earth: Altinum revealed... and in Google Earth
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Altinum was a prosperous Roman city on the coastal lowlands of northern Italy. It was sacked by Attila the Hun in the 5th century AD, and conquered by the Lombards a century later. Historians now speculate that these events prompted inhabitants from Altinum and other towns in the vicinity to resettle on more easily defended islands in a nearby lagoon... thus founding Venice. (Wikipedia has a good concise history of the town.)

Now the journal Science has published the results of an aerial survey of Altinum by Andrea Ninfo, Alessandro Fontana, Paolo Mozzi, and Francesco Ferrarese at the University of Padua. (You have to pay $15 for the full-text version, but ScienceNOW has an informative (free) article based on the results, while a free PDF supplement contains methodology and original source imagery.) Their research provides us with the first proper map of Altinum.

Why is this out of the ordinary? A few reasons: Altinum was abandoned wholesale, making it is one of the few Roman settlements in Europe not subsequently subsumed by medieval towns. And while Altinum's building stones were eventually carted off as construction material elsewhere, the foundations remained, and these became especially visible during a drought in 2007. This allowed for an unusually comprehensive reconstruction of the town. From ScienceNOW:

The researchers discovered that the crops planted on the land were in different stages of ripening, thanks to differences in the amount of water in the soil. Lighter crops traced the outlines of buildings — including a basilica, an amphitheater, a forum, and what may have been temples — buried at least 40 centimeters below the surface. To the south of the city center runs a wide strip of riper crops. They were growing above what clearly used to be a canal, an indication that Venice's Roman forebears were already incorporating waterways into their urban fabric.
The BBC News carries a virtual flyover of the near-infrared aerial image that the researchers took. Italian news agency ANSA has quotes from one of the team members describing what they found:

''We see a walled city, a theatre, an amphitheatre outside the walls, the basilica, the forum with its market, then a principle road connected to the Via Annia (the Roman road through northern Italy),'' said [team leader Paolo] Mozzi.

"You can also see a canal that divides the city in two and heads towards the lagoon. Considering the sea level in Roman times, that canal must have been connected to the lagoon as well as with nearby rivers," he said, adding that the map also suggests a protected port that would have been used by merchant ships...
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