Waterscape and Floods Management of Greek Selinus: The Cottone River Valley

This paper investigates water bodies in the Greek colony of Selinus, Western Sicily-Italy. It focuses especially on one of the two rivers of the city: the Cottone. The investigative strategy adopted in this study consists of an interdisciplinary approach based on the analysis of archaeological evide...

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Main Author: Mazza Alba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2021-09-01
Series:Open Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0172
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spelling doaj-dbc10b3b145849c4819c0026dd1e86862021-10-03T07:42:41ZengDe GruyterOpen Archaeology2300-65602021-09-01711066109010.1515/opar-2020-0172Waterscape and Floods Management of Greek Selinus: The Cottone River ValleyMazza Alba0HJF (CTR) Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency, 590 Moffet St., Bldg. 4077, Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, HI 96853, United StatesThis paper investigates water bodies in the Greek colony of Selinus, Western Sicily-Italy. It focuses especially on one of the two rivers of the city: the Cottone. The investigative strategy adopted in this study consists of an interdisciplinary approach based on the analysis of archaeological evidence, Earth Sciences data, and the study of historical cartography. Results indicate that the Cottone River was not a swampy and unhealthy intermittent stream as it was believed so far; it was instead a fully functional water body featuring an active floodplain. Most importantly, research presented in this article indicates several floods occurred in Selinus from the second or third quarter of the sixth century BC to the end of the fifth century BC. These floods, which occurred at the peak of Selinus’ cultural and economic life, were related to severe major events, rather than seasonal floods, as suggested by other scholars. The management of these floods and the waterscape was crucial to the city’s prosperity. This article also analyzes the relationship between the Cottone River and the fortification walls located at the Cottone River Valley. Results indicate that the fortification walls functioned not only as a defensive infrastructure, but also as a hydraulic engineering solution for flood retention. A better understanding of the environment in which Selinus was settled is now available, and knowledge on the importance of waterscapes and their management has been enhanced.https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0172sicilyselinuntewaterscapescoastal landscapefloodswater managementgreek archaeology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mazza Alba
spellingShingle Mazza Alba
Waterscape and Floods Management of Greek Selinus: The Cottone River Valley
Open Archaeology
sicily
selinunte
waterscapes
coastal landscape
floods
water management
greek archaeology
author_facet Mazza Alba
author_sort Mazza Alba
title Waterscape and Floods Management of Greek Selinus: The Cottone River Valley
title_short Waterscape and Floods Management of Greek Selinus: The Cottone River Valley
title_full Waterscape and Floods Management of Greek Selinus: The Cottone River Valley
title_fullStr Waterscape and Floods Management of Greek Selinus: The Cottone River Valley
title_full_unstemmed Waterscape and Floods Management of Greek Selinus: The Cottone River Valley
title_sort waterscape and floods management of greek selinus: the cottone river valley
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Archaeology
issn 2300-6560
publishDate 2021-09-01
description This paper investigates water bodies in the Greek colony of Selinus, Western Sicily-Italy. It focuses especially on one of the two rivers of the city: the Cottone. The investigative strategy adopted in this study consists of an interdisciplinary approach based on the analysis of archaeological evidence, Earth Sciences data, and the study of historical cartography. Results indicate that the Cottone River was not a swampy and unhealthy intermittent stream as it was believed so far; it was instead a fully functional water body featuring an active floodplain. Most importantly, research presented in this article indicates several floods occurred in Selinus from the second or third quarter of the sixth century BC to the end of the fifth century BC. These floods, which occurred at the peak of Selinus’ cultural and economic life, were related to severe major events, rather than seasonal floods, as suggested by other scholars. The management of these floods and the waterscape was crucial to the city’s prosperity. This article also analyzes the relationship between the Cottone River and the fortification walls located at the Cottone River Valley. Results indicate that the fortification walls functioned not only as a defensive infrastructure, but also as a hydraulic engineering solution for flood retention. A better understanding of the environment in which Selinus was settled is now available, and knowledge on the importance of waterscapes and their management has been enhanced.
topic sicily
selinunte
waterscapes
coastal landscape
floods
water management
greek archaeology
url https://doi.org/10.1515/opar-2020-0172
work_keys_str_mv AT mazzaalba waterscapeandfloodsmanagementofgreekselinusthecottonerivervalley
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