As the Iliad's Troy was separated from Minoan Crete/Thera by about 400 or 500 years, characterising a hypothetical port of Troy as a "Minoan" city is not applicable at all, imo.E.P. Grondine wrote:I'm fairly well convinced that there is an identified and unexcavated "Minoan" city located on the coast there - the port of Troy.
The Bronze Age Minoan DNA Transportation System
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Re: The Bronze Age Minoan DNA Transportation System
Last edited by Rokcet Scientist on Sat Jun 26, 2010 12:15 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: The Bronze Age Minoan DNA Transportation System
No, that isn't doubted, afaik. Instead I think that the seafaring skills, technologies, and capabilities of the era – in particular those of the Phoenicians – are extremely underestimated and undervalued. I believe the Phoenicians – and their successors, the Carthaginians – achieved much, much more, and were correspondingly much more important for the development of civilisation, than they are given credit for.Minimalist wrote:Does anyone doubt that, R/S? The Bronze Age trade network has been well established with Minoan artifacts found all around the Eastern Med.Anyway, if that was Akrotiri, that must date back to the 16th century BC. And the seafaring skills and technology of the time seem very well developed already.
Re: The Bronze Age Minoan DNA Transportation System
When I was on Crete, I stayed at Amnisos. I saw holes dug sideways into ground where the waves had eaten away the shore bank, following the use of metal detectors.
We sometimes forget here that this is not a private conversation, and that all the world can see what we write here. I did, and I apologize. I should have used PM.
We sometimes forget here that this is not a private conversation, and that all the world can see what we write here. I did, and I apologize. I should have used PM.
Re: The Bronze Age Minoan DNA Transportation System
And what is your point, E.P.?E.P. Grondine wrote:When I was on Crete, I stayed at Amnisos. I saw holes dug sideways into ground where the waves had eaten away the shore bank, following the use of metal detectors.
We sometimes forget here that this is not a private conversation, and that all the world can see what we write here. I did, and I apologize. I should have used PM.
Luckily metal detectors cannot detect the stone tools of the HEs and HSSs that colonized Crete and Thera.