Sangro Valley Project

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The site of the Sangro Valley Project 2013, in Tornareccio, Italy.

The Sangro Valley Project was an Anglo-American archaeological excavation in Abruzzo, Italy. It was notable for its revolutionary interpretation of Samnium as a dynamic participant in the history of the Adriatic as well as its early adoption of modern excavation technologies, such as GIS.[1][2] The project was managed by Oberlin College in collaboration with Oxford University, Durham University and the Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici dell'Abruzzo, is a multi-disciplinary team of specialists from Canada, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

As a chartered excavation, the project sought to characterize and investigate the nature, pattern and dynamics of human habitation and land use in the longue durée within the context of a Mediterranean river valley system. The project sustained both a research program and a month-long didactic field school for undergraduates and saw the symbiotic relation between the two as fundamental to its mission. It also sought to engage in knowledge transfer to the benefit of the local communities, acting as a professional research partner for the Soprintendenza in its work in the region.[3]

Project History

Notable publications

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI