Traces of Submerged Roman Road Found Beneath Venetian Lagoon
Researchers in Italy have found the remains of a Roman road and dock at the bottom of a Venetian lagoon. We believe that what we found is a part of a road that connected the southern and the northern part of the Venice lagoon, Fantina Madricardo, a geophysicist at the ISMAR-Marine Science Institute in Venice, tells the Art Newspapers Garry Shaw.
The pathway would have allowed people to travel to and from the ancient Roman city of Altinum, located at the north end of the lagoon. As Madricardo and her colleagues write in the journal Scientific Reports, their findings suggest the area that became the lagoon was home to extensive Roman settlements long before the founding of Venice in the fifth century C.E. At the time, far more of what is now underwater would have been dry land.
The Venice lagoon formed from the main sea-level rise after the last glaciation, so it's a long-term process, Madricardo tells Live Sciences Tom Metcalfe. We know that since Roman timesabout 2,000 yearsthat the sea level there rose up to eight feet. Per Krista Charles of New Scientist, archaeologist Ernesto Canal first suggested that ancient artificial structures stood beneath the canals waters back in the 1980s. His idea sparked vigorous debate among researchers, but technology at the time didnt allow for much exploration. The area is very difficult to investigate by divers because there are strong currents and the water in the Venice lagoon is very turbid, Madricardo tells New Scientist.
The team also found 12 structures, some as much as 9 feet high and 170 feet long, by the presumed route of the road, as well as what appear to have been docks. According to Haaretzs Ariel David, historians have previously suggested that large-scale settlement of the Venice area only began in the fifth century, when refugees from the declining Western Roman Empire fled there to escape invasions. Venice was thought to have been built in a deserted place without any previous traces of human presence, Madricardo tells Haaretz.
Altinum was the main urban site in the region but now we believe that there were already multiple settlements in the lagoon that were connected to it and coexisted with it, so the migration to this area was a more gradual process that started earlier.
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/roman-road-found-beneath-venice-lagoon-180978262/