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'Abnormally shaped' skulls from ancient hypogeum in Malta to be studied


Human skulls found at the prehistoric Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum are to be studied in attempt to uncover the mystery of their origin and abnormal shape.

'Abnormally shaped' skulls from ancient hypogeum in Malta to be studied
The skulls, dating back to 3000-2500 BC, were first discovered in 1902
[
Credit: Times of Malta]
In 1926, Temi Zammit described the skulls found at the prehistoric burial site as being “of the long variety (dolichocephalic.)”


Some thought they were from a culture that deliberately modified skulls, while others went as far as to claim they were from aliens.

'Abnormally shaped' skulls from ancient hypogeum in Malta to be studied
Some strange theories surround the abnormally shaped skulls
[Credit: Hera Magazine]
Researchers from the Superintendence of Cultural Heritage, Malta and Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia will look into their condition and origin.


The €6,000 project entitled ‘The Sentinels of Ħal Saflieni, Malta: Science Facts versus Science Fiction’ will be funded by the Union Académique Internationale.

'Abnormally shaped' skulls from ancient hypogeum in Malta to be studied
Chamber with burial niches in the Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum
[Credit: Hamelin de Guettelet/WikiCommons]
Associate Professor Ronika Power of Maquarie University, Sydney was awarded the funding and will work with curators of the National Museum of Archaeology and the Prehistoric Sites Department of Heritage Malta, the osteologist of the Superintendence of Cultural Heritage, Malta, and international institutions.


The Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum is a multi-level underground burial complex in Paola.

Earliest remains at the site date back to about 4000BC, and the complex was used over a span of many centuries, up to 2500 BC.

Source: Times of Malta [July 26, 2019]

Excavation reveals complex story of ancient Tas-Silġ site


Right from the first excavations carried out in the area known as Tas-Silġ, Marsaxlokk in the 1960s by the Missione Archeologica Italiana, it was evident that this was a significant archaeological site.

Excavation reveals complex story of ancient Tas-Silġ site
The current excavations revealed ancient remains beneath the floor
of a 19th-century farmhouse [Credit: Times of Malta]
Throughout the years, the site continued to unravel further discoveries and a current excavation by Heritage Malta − in collaboration with the Department of Classics and Archaeology at the University of Malta and with support by the Superintendence of Cultural Heritage − confirmed once more that the ancient site has a more complex story than previously thought.

The new findings came to light when Heritage Malta and the Ministry for  Culture embarked on a new project to restore and transform a 19th-century farmhouse to serve as a small visitor centre.


“The farmhouse was never excavated and so this project offered a unique opportunity to get a glimpse of what has been hiding beneath it,” David Cardona, Heritage Malta, senior curator and Tas-Silġ project director, said.

This project also served as an opportunity to a group of students reading for an undergraduate degree in archaeology at the University who were involved in this excavation as part of their formal fieldwork training.

Excavation reveals complex story of ancient Tas-Silġ site
Finds of the latest excavations being documented
[Credit: Times of Malta]
The first systematic archaeological investigations of the site which were carried out by the Missione Archeologica Italiana had uncovered substantial structural remains of a multi-period sanctuary, ranging from the Neolithic to the Phoenician, Punic and Late Republican Roman period.  On the other hand, the University studies, which took place to the south of the main site, led to the discovery of a substantial amount of pottery fragments and animal bones.

Tas-Silġ site director and University lecturer Maxine Anastasi explained that pottery fragments can reveal much information, including the different periods when the site was in use, how the pottery was made and from where the material was obtained, how the pottery was utilised and what people were eating.


“Inscribed pottery can provide further data and these were found in their hundreds at the southern site of Tas-Silġ,” she said.

Dr Anastasi revealed that the current excavations have also yielded pottery, some of which had inscriptions, animal bones, as well as other artefacts such as Punic and Roman building materials and fragments of architectural cornices that once adorned the temple façade.

Excavation reveals complex story of ancient Tas-Silġ site
Pottery fragment with an inscription found during the current excavations
[Credit: Times of Malta]
According to Heritage Malta field archaeologist and Tas-Silġ site director Francesco Fontanelli, a strong point of this site is that it offers unparalleled insights about the various cultures that were present on the islands since the Temple Period and how every new culture interacted with their predecessors and the structures left there by them.

“Even the farmhouse forms part of this narrative and this year it was time to disclose its story,” he said.


The removal of the floors of the farmhouse has, in fact, uncovered further important archaeological remains, including a succession of floors and walls, mostly related to the extensions constructed in the Republican period.

The new discoveries have also identified a number of ‘robber’ or spoliation trenches which were dug in more modern times to exploit the good building stone of the ancient temple.

John C. Betts, senior lecturer at the University and also Tas-Silġ site director, explained that all the excavations inside and around the farmhouse were duly documented.

Excavation reveals complex story of ancient Tas-Silġ site
Newly-found pottery fragments being washed
[Credit: Times of Malta]
Photos were taken in all the areas to produce 3D models of the site during and after the excavations.

A drone will eventually also be used to produce a photographic map of the entire site and a 3D model of the area.

Asked whether the Tas-Silġ site could be far more extensive than what was discovered until now, Dr Cardona explained that the present boundaries of the site were built on the same lines of the properties which were expropriated at the time of the original 1960s excavations.


Therefore, it is possible that these do not necessarily reflect the size of the site.

“The main hindrance in understanding the site as one complex remains the road that splits the temple precinct in two,” Dr Cardona noted.

“Both sides of the road have been investigated by extensive excavations but the link between the two areas and how they both worked together within the complex religious, social and cultural processes of this important temple is still missing; buried under a road that has been present on site since at least the 1600s,” he added.

Excavation reveals complex story of ancient Tas-Silġ site
The extensive site of Tas-Silg, in the limits of Marsaxlokk
[Credit: Times of Malta]
Nicholas Vella, head of the Department of Classics and Archaeology at the University and Tas-Silġ project director, fully agrees.

He remarked that the time was ripe to consider rerouting the road so that the whole of Tas-Silġ can be enjoyed as one important archaeological site.

“It is likely that beneath the road lie the remains of the large area that served as the place where pilgrims to this sanctuary congregated in Punic and Roman times before accessing the holy precincts − a sort of parvis that we get in front of parish churches locally,” Prof. Vella said.


Heritage Malta has recently launched a long-term plan to protect, conserve and make the site more accessible to the public.

“A management brief is currently being drafted to put on paper Heritage Malta’s future vision of this site,” Dr Cardona said.

“This is being done through consultation with the different stakeholders. The restoration and transformation of this farmhouse into a small visitor facility centre is just one of many steps required to make Heritage Malta’s final vision possible.”

Author: Fiona Vella | Source: Times of Malta [July 18, 2019]

2,000-year-old temple floor discovered at Malta's Tas-Silġ excavations


The floor of a temple dating back to prehistoric times was uncovered in ongoing excavation works at Tas-Silġ, the Culture Ministry said.

2,000-year-old temple floor discovered at Malta's Tas-Silġ excavations
Credit: Heritage Malta
In a statement, it said the 2,000-year-old floor of the Temple of Ashtart was uncovered in a 'farmhouse' with various remains at the site.


The removal of the farmhouse floors have uncovered a series of floors and preparation layers, the ministry said.

2,000-year-old temple floor discovered at Malta's Tas-Silġ excavations
Credit: Heritage Malta
"The site at Tas-Silg contains the remains of over 4,000 years of structures, most of which were used for religious purposes," Culture Minister Owen Bonnici said.


The Temple of Ashtart was made famous by Roman senator and orator Cicero when made reference to it in a prosecution speech against Caius Verres.

2,000-year-old temple floor discovered at Malta's Tas-Silġ excavations
Credit: Heritage Malta
Along the years, both the Missione Archeologica a Malta and the Department of Classics and Archaeology of the University of Malta have conducted extensive excavations at this site.


A 'farmhouse' located on the site is being restored and will be turned into a visitor centre equipped with digital interpretations.

Island cores unravel mysteries of ancient Maltese civilisation


The mysteries of an ancient civilisation that survived for more than a millennium on the island of Malta—and then collapsed within two generations—have been unravelled by archaeologists who analysed pollen buried deep within the earth and ancient DNA from skulls and bones.

Island cores unravel mysteries of ancient Maltese civilisation
The Ġgantija temples of Malta are among the earliest free-standing buildings known
[Credit: Bs0u10e01, licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0]
It's part of a field of work that is expanding the use of archaeological techniques into environments where they were previously thought to be unusable.

The Temple Culture of the Maltese archipelago in the Mediterranean began nearly 6,000 years ago and at its height probably numbered several thousand people—far denser than the people of mainland Europe could manage at the time. The island people constructed elaborate sacred sites, such as the famous Ġgantija temple complex, and their buildings are among the earliest free-standing buildings known. But, after 1,500 years, they were gone.

Professor Caroline Malone, prehistory specialist at Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland, wanted to understand how the fragile island ecology sustained the people for so long despite drought, violent storms and soil erosion—and why it ultimately failed.


She ran an ambitious project, Fragsus, which drew on multiple tools to find some answers. Scientists drilled earth cores ranging from eight to 30 metres deep, dating the sediment using carbon dating to understand which time period it referred to.

They counted the pollen at 2cm intervals and analysed individual pollen grains using chemical signatures imprinted by the surrounding environment to understand what nutrients the parent plants were absorbing from the ground. Molluscs embedded in the soil revealed glimpses of the landscape since 'snails are very particular about where they live and don't move far," said Prof. Malone.

Meanwhile, other specialists assessed the wear and tear on tens of thousands of human bones from a burial site to understand the islanders' lifestyles. The team broke new ground by analysing bone with a technique called ancient DNA (aDNA) analysis, says Prof. Malone. It had previously been thought that the warmth of any climate south of the Alps would destroy such old DNA. But it turned out that skulls buried at a relatively cool five metres' depth still harboured aDNA within thick bone behind the ear.

Erosion

From what they've uncovered, the team thinks that these people understood the importance of soil management to fend off starvation. Within a hundred years of their arrival on the tiny, 316 square km archipelago they had felled most of the trees, exposing the ground to drastic erosion.

To survive, they reared dairy animals rather than prioritising meat—killing off newborn livestock before they had a chance to graze. They mixed livestock manure back into the soil and may even have made back-breaking journeys carting soil washed into the valleys back uphill to refresh the upland fields.

The evidence for this lies in strange, parallel ruts in the ground that may be cart tracks, as well as signs from the skeletons that soft tissue had sometimes been worn completely away by hard, repetitive activity. Oddly, says Prof. Malone, they ate almost no fish.

Island cores unravel mysteries of ancient Maltese civilisation
Malta's lost civilisation only lasted 1,500 years but it produced
some of the oldest buildings still standing today
[Credit: Horizon]
To achieve such complex collaborative effort something powerful must have held the community together: the temples.

Until now, the Temple Culture was thought to have centred on the worship of a mother goddess, but Prof. Malone thinks it was more of a clubhouse culture, focused on ritual and feasting but where food—rather than a deity—was revered. In the complexes it is now clear that the people displayed their livestock and harvests on special benches and altars, feasted, and also stored food.

There is no skeletal evidence of violent death and no fortifications, said Prof. Malone. Instead the society appears to have survived through cooperation and sharing.

Deficiencies

Despite the society's strength and success, as centuries passed the soil erosion and climate conditions worsened, as evidenced by the different types of pollen in the soil, the diminishing number of tree remains and the human bones wracked with evidence of dietary deficiencies.


In the final centuries of the Temple Culture, between 2600 BC and 2400 BC, half of those dying were children.

Other factors likely contributed, said Prof. Malone. Adult skulls from this time are greatly varied, their DNA indicating the arrival of immigrants from as far as the Eurasian Steppes and sub-Saharan Africa, possibly causing population pressure and new diseases.

The decisive blow may have been an unknown catastrophe that occurred around 2350 BC, a period during which, according to tree ring analysis, the whole region suffered a catastrophic climate event—possibly a dust cloud caused by a volcanic eruption.

Laboratories

Islands can be used as laboratories for understanding change in the wider world, said Prof. Malone. However, the geographical peculiarities of islands can also present problems by rendering conventional research techniques redundant. In Spain's Canary Islands, for example, ancient pollen is not well-preserved in the local terrain. What's more, many important plants on the islands—such as its emblematic laurel trees—produce no, or little, pollen, and the environmental conditions have also eroded other pieces of evidence, such as macrofossils.

Island cores unravel mysteries of ancient Maltese civilisation
Palaeo environmental DNA in sediment cores is providing a long term perspective
of how Spain’s Canary Islands weathered past climate change
[Credit: Lea de Nascimento]
Dr. Lea de Nascimento, a specialist in ecology at the Universidad de La Laguna in Tenerife said: "We lack (good preservation of) all the conventional proxies."

She wants to piece together the history of vegetation on the Canaries—in particular, what they were like before humans arrived over 2,000 years ago. To do so, she is using a new palaeoecological technique called palaeoenvironmental DNA analysis.

eDNA

Environmental DNA (eDNA) is left in soil or water by microorganisms, plant and animal species, and scientists increasingly scan for it to find out what's going on in today's environment. It is a relatively new palaeoecological tool, which has so far been used in the coldest and driest places because of its vulnerability to warmth and humidity. But Dr. de Nascimento is now probing for it in core samples spanning several thousand years from the islands.


For the ISLANDPALECO project, she has spent two years learning from experts at a dedicated laboratory in New Zealand how to search for palaeo environmental DNA in sediment cores. After a year of setbacks, she has now found 100-year-old DNA of a much richer variety than can be found in the pollen record. She is still hoping to retrieve older palaeo environmental DNA.

"If you have a long perspective you will know the resilience of ecosystems," she said. "It will help us understand how an ecosystem will react if we keep putting pressure on it in the future—or in response to climate change."

She says that knowing more about past ecosystems will also help today's conservationists restore landscapes depleted by humans and the animals they brought with them.

"The problem is you could invest a lot of money restoring an ecosystem that was never there," she said.

Author: Aisling Irwin | Source: Horizon: The EU Research & Innovation Magazine [July 11, 2019]

Malta's neglected Fort Ricasoli to finally undergo restoration


Extensive plans for the restoration of the imperilled Fort Ricasoli were given the go-ahead by the Planning Authority on Monday, six years after they were submitted.

Malta's neglected Fort Ricasoli to finally undergo restoration
Credit: WikiCommons
The plans by the government Restoration Directorate will see the restoration, in several phases, of large parts of the Kalkara fortifications – including bastion and parapet gun emplacements, ditches, ravelins, barrack blocks and a chapel – to ensure their long-term preservation.


Fort Ricasoli, built by the Knights of St John and the largest on the island, has been in a dire state of deterioration for years, with sections of its outer bastions already having crashed into the sea and heritage experts warning that further collapse was inevitable without immediate intervention.

Malta's neglected Fort Ricasoli to finally undergo restoration
Credit: WikiCommons
A report drawn up by the Restoration Directorate as part of the planning process noted that the deterioration had largely been caused by the rough seas which continuously batter the exposed ramparts.

The report concluded that wave action had caused extensive structural damage to the bastions facing the open sea, causing their collapse, while salt contamination had further attacked masonry elements and rock outcrops.

Malta's neglected Fort Ricasoli to finally undergo restoration
Credit: WikiCommons
Extensive rust damage was found on steel structural elements and fittings added in later years, while further damage had been caused by the unchecked growth of algae and vegetation, neglect and lack of maintenance, as well as pollution from the burning of fossil fuels.


The planned restoration works include cleaning and reconstruction missing sections of the limestone fabric, restoration of deteriorated masonry and collapsed structures, and structural consolidation.

Malta's neglected Fort Ricasoli to finally undergo restoration
Credit: WikiCommons
The rock face below the fort will also be consolidated as a hazard reduction measure.

Although the application for the works was submitted in May 2013, it appears to have lain dormant for years, and was only approved by the PA on Monday.

Malta's neglected Fort Ricasoli to finally undergo restoration
Credit: WikiCommons
The Restoration Directorate did not respond to questions on why the plans were delayed and where they fitted in the broader strategy for conserving the fort.


Concerns over the fort’s survival have increased in recent years, and heritage group Wirt il-Kalkara last year estimated it would take €50 million worth of emergency works to ensure its survival.

Malta's neglected Fort Ricasoli to finally undergo restoration
Credit: WikiCommons
Designed by the Italian military engineer Antonio Maurizio Valperga, the fort was built between 1670 and 1698 on a promontory known as Gallows Point, commanding the entrance to the Grand Harbour. Over the centuries, it was occupied and added to by the Knights of St John, the French and, finally, the British army and Royal Navy, before being decommissioned in the 1960s, since when it has been used for industry and as a film location, including for Gladiator and Game of Thrones.

It is a Grade 1 scheduled national monument and has been on the tentative list of Unesco World Heritage Sites since 1998.

Author: Philip Leone Ganado | Source: The Times of Malta [June 22, 2019]

Studies strengthen case for abrupt end of Malta’s Neolithic culture


A recent study by leading archaeologists suggests that the decline of the Neolithic civilisation in Malta was unexpected and preceded by “intensifying (building) activity” only to be followed by an abrupt end.

Studies strengthen case for abrupt end of Malta’s Neolithic culture
Statue of two seated corpulent figures, found face-down and broken in context 831 of the upper “shrine”
 [Credit: Malone et al. 2009; © McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research]
The study also throws light on how despite environmental challenges Malta had managed to maintain a thriving population over thousands of years.

“How could an apparently dense population, farming quite intensely, have maintained continuity or sustained what seems to be a sufficiently productive environment if constantly engaged in over-production?” ask the authors of the study.

The study is based on the radiocarbon dating of bones and artifacts from the Brochtorff Circle at Xagħra, achieved through the ToTL and FRAGSUS projects, which now “provides a more precise chronology for the sequence of development and use of a cave complex”.

The study suggests “apparent continuity” between the Żebbuġ phase (4000 BC) to the end of the Temple culture (2500 BC), “with indications that the population retained good health and nutrition.” It also suggests “that the soil quality of the islands was exceptionally good, although gradually in decline in the third millennium BC”.


This suggests that prehistoric people of Malta understood “how to manage the relatively marginal environment”, with its marked seasonal aridity, wind, erosion, lack of dense vegetation or tree-cover and limitations of size, “in a manner that was sustainable”.

But this also demanded an intensive regime of “crop rotation, soil management and livestock control which probably ensured “a degree of economic continuity and stability over the Tarxien period (3150-2500 BC). Milk production may be one explanation for the large number of “mature, even old, female cattle and sheep bones and sieves” and the abundance of pottery vessels “might account for cheese making”.

Yet milking cows, which require up to 70 litres of water per day in summer, also posed problems due to water scarcity. Bulls predominate in artistic representations, but possibly this reflected “the rarity of mature beasts and their great value in feasting.”

Still, despite the environmental problems, “Malta and Gozo, small though they are, evidently maintained a relatively stable and viable economic system that in turn enabled the putatively crowded island community to survive over centuries”.


Yet something went wrong at the end of the temple period, which may well be linked to the role of temples as a sort of “communal club houses for formalised, ritualised feasting.” In fact, the structures contain remarkable quantities of pottery, animal bone, fire pits, huge communal stone or ceramic cooking/ serving vessels, tethering places for animals, altars and display areas, usually organised to maximise public viewing and participation.

Such events might well have undermined the sustainability of Neolithic Malta putting “stress on both people and their environment, demanding additional food production to meet the expectations of a doubtless competitive society.

The study refers to dietary data currently under analysis to establish whether skeletal material indicates reduced levels of meat eating towards the end of the Neolithic. Initial findings imply that cereals became more dominant with less and less meat being consumed.

Evidence from pollen seems to suggest increasing drought episodes and fewer trees as the third millennium progressed, which implies that “environmental changes impacted on the productivity, seasonality and the social cohesion of Neolithic Maltese communities” which may well have become more hierarchical.


Yet, so far, there is no evidence that faced with these environmental challenges, the inhabitants resorted to violence to ensure social cohesion. In fact, exhaustive re-examination of the skeletal material from the Xagħra Circle has identified only a few cases of trauma, which may have resulted from violence. It may well be the case that while temples served to reinforce cohesion the underground settings of the Xagħra Circle and the Ħal Saflieni hypogeums could have been related to an “ever tighter control of the dead.”

So, was Malta’s distinct identity in the temple period a result of the island’s insularity? Evidence suggests that this was not the case as Malta remained connected with its nearest neighbours.

Yet by the third millennium BC, the cultural identity of Malta appears to be quite distinct from Sicilian practices. The study suggests that Malta’s identity consciously defied the tide in Spain and in Sicily, “a reinforcement of locally important values of cooperation and consensus, against a wider tide of differentiation and accumulation”.

So what brought an end to centuries of stability and social cohesion? Curiously the evidence from Xaghra does not suggest “decades or centuries of decline.” What “we see instead is a pattern of sustained or even intensifying activity, with renewed investment in the site made in the form of megaliths and other features during its final phases of use”.

The story of how a “long-lived and rich tradition was rather abruptly put aside” may well serve as a cautionary tale for future generations; decline may be unexpected, sudden and devastating.

The study is published in Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences.

Author: James Debono | Source: Malta Today [March 16, 2019]

2,000-year-old skull from St Paul's Catacombs in Malta undergoing facial reconstruction


A woman buried at St Paul’s Catacombs almost 2,000 years ago is to be ‘brought back to life’ thanks to expert facial reconstruction techniques which will bring visitors face-to-face with an ancient local resident.

2,000-year-old skull from St Paul's Catacombs in Malta undergoing facial reconstruction
The woman's skull was the best-preserved archaeologists found in the site
[Credit: Heritage Malta]
Eventually, this facial reconstruction will form part of the site’s permanent display, Heritage Malta explained in a statement.

The woman’s skeleton was discovered during archaeological excavations beneath the catacombs’ new visitor centre and was chosen for reconstruction as her skull was the only one found with a complete jaw.


She is believed to have been between 18 and 27 and roughly 145cm tall when she died.

Studies on the bones indicate that although the woman must have had a reasonably healthy childhood, she was already suffering from degenerative joint disease, possibly due to mechanical work.

Osteoarchaeologist and forensic anthropologist Roberto Micciche, Adjunct of Anthropology at the University of Palermo, together with forensic anthropologist Daniele Di Lorenzo are carrying out reconstruction work. The project forms part of the post-excavation studies of the archaeological excavations held at St Paul’s Catacombs.

Source: Times of Malta [September 12, 2018]

New discoveries at Roman Villa in Malta's Żejtun


A Roman Villa in Żejtun continued to be used as an olive oil-producing establishment until the end of the third century AD, the University of Malta’s Archaeology department has found.

New discoveries at Roman Villa in Malta's Żejtun
A view of two narrow trenches cut into the rock for planting vines, covered by later Roman
agricultural equipment [Credit: Times of Malta]
A preliminary study of the coins and fragments of imported pottery found by the department also indicated the villa experienced a period of extensive renovation works during the Roman period.



Since 2006, a team from the Classics and Archaeology Department have been entrusted with re-investigating the site in Żejtun. For four weeks each year, a team of students reading for a degree in archaeology collaborate towards piecing together the villa’s complex history as part of their practical training in archaeological excavation.

New discoveries at Roman Villa in Malta's Żejtun
Roman cooking pot from the late 3rd century AD [Credit: Times of Malta]
The studies undertaken during 10 four-week campaigns at the Roman villa have culminated in “exciting results” aboutthe history of the historic place, the Archaeology Department said. Results found the site had been occupied in Punic times after a large cistern was excavated in the rock to collect rainwater.


The land was then used to cultivate grapes, most probably for the production of wine. Sometime before the first century BC, the vineyard was abandoned and in its place the villa was built, clearly making use of recycled stone blocks which belonged to an earlier structure.

New discoveries at Roman Villa in Malta's Żejtun
Bowl inscribed with Punic letters of the 3rd century BC [Credit: Times of Malta]
The remains still visible today belong to a large farming estate, combining living quarters and an area dedicated to agricultural activity.

This year, the archaeologists are concentrating on two particular areas: the area to the north of the site which housed the olive press and a series of walls to the south which marked the southern-most limit of the Roman villa.

Author: Denise Grech | Source: Times of Malta [July 24, 2018]