Ancient Bronze Age Complex Discovered
Archaeologists digging on the Cycladic island of Keros in the central Aegean, have revealed “unusually sophisticated prehistoric monuments,” according to a press release from Cambridge University’s Department of Archaeology.
The report said that new excavations have revealed that the settlement of Daskalio, the site adjoining the prehistoric sanctuary on Keros, had a “more imposing and densely occupied series of structures than had previously been realised,” making it “one of the most impressive sites in the Aegean during the Early Bronze Age (3rd millennium BC).”
“[Daskalio] was almost entirely covered by remarkable monumental constructions built using stone brought painstakingly from Naxos, some 10 km distant,” it said.
The research team, led by archaeologists from the University of Cambridge, the Ephorate of the Cyclades and the Cyprus Institute, have calculated that more than 1000 tons of stone were imported and that almost every possible space on the island was built on, giving the impression of a single large monument jutting out of the sea.
The complex is the largest known in the Cyclades from that era.
(Source: Greekreporter.com)