The Base of the Colossus of the Naxians on the island of Delos, Greece Alena Veasey/Shutterstock
One of the great statues of antiquity has been connected to its likely birthplace by analysis of its marble.
The Colossus of the Naxians on the Greek island of Delos once stood about 9 metres tall, but is now in pieces. One is at the British Museum in London, while the rest are in Greece. The statue鈥檚 name refers to the island of Naxos, which has been a major source of marble since the Greek archaic era from 800 BC to 480 BC聽鈥 but it isn鈥檛 from either of two known quarries of that period.
Instead, the marble has the chemical signature of a deposit in another part of the island, found by Scott Pike at Willamette University in Oregon. He will present his results at a meeting of the Geological Society of America on 11 October.
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His interest in the statue dates from the 1990s, when he tried to聽check the assertion carved on the聽base that it was made 鈥渙f one marble鈥. The British Museum let him聽take a sample from the right foot, but permission from Greek authorities was difficult to come by.
Pike compared the proportions of聽stable isotopes of carbon and oxygen in the marble to a database of known Greek quarries. 鈥淢arble is聽metamorphosed limestone,鈥 he聽says. 鈥淭he isotopic signature is聽related to how that limestone formed.鈥 The data suggested the marble of the statue came from somewhere in the south of Naxos.
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Recently, Pike got permission to聽do a geological survey there, and聽he found a line of hills capped by marble not noted on geological maps. The isotopes in the marble are a good match for the statue.
There was an abandoned quarry聽as well, but due to its size and the pattern of extractions, Pike doubts that it birthed the Colossus of the Naxians. Because he didn鈥檛 have a permit for archaeological sampling, he couldn鈥檛 date it. He plans to return with such a permit and a lidar-equipped drone to see if he can find other quarries or the roads and slipways used to transport finished statues.
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