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The man who came late to dinner. A sundial, a raven, and a missed dinner party on a mosaic at Tarsus

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 October 2019

Katherine M. D. Dunbabin
Affiliation:
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, [email protected]
Işık Adak Adıbelli
Affiliation:
Kirşehir Ahi Evran Univ., Dept. of Archaeology, Kirşehir, [email protected]
Mehmet Çavuş
Affiliation:
Adana, Cultural and Natural Heritage Preservation Board, [email protected]
Doğukan Alper
Affiliation:
Tarsus Museum, Tarsus, Mersin, [email protected]

Extract

In 2012, construction works at the traditional olive market at Tarsus, in Eski Ömerli district, revealed large-scale architectural remains of the Roman period; the construction works were halted and a salvage excavation was initiated by Tarsus Museum. The remains that appeared at the first stage of the excavations were interpreted as those of a reservoir from the Roman Imperial period, stretching along a N–S axis. On the E side, a structure projects from the E wall of the reservoir, containing a pool that collects water flowing from drainage pipes set in the reservoir’s façade. The pool was extended in two stages in late antiquity.1 Two metres north of this pool and 3 m from the E wall of the reservoir, the excavations revealed a mosaic pavement (9.73 x 5.05 m), apparently forming part of the floor of a building running parallel to the reservoir’s wall (fig. 1).

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Journal of Roman Archaeology L.L.C. 2019 

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