ORIGIN OF ROMAN WORKED STONES FROM ST. SATURNO CHRISTIAN BASILICA (SOUTH SARDINIA, ITALY)

Authors

  • Stefano Columbu
  • Fabrizio Antonelli
  • Fabio Sitzia

Keywords:

Isotopic analysis, Carrara marble, Greek marble, provenance, Roman time, Romanesque, Medieval building, St. Saturnino Basilica

Abstract

The work aims to define the origin of the architectural stone elements worked by Romans and reused in the

St. Saturno Basilica, between the late Antiquity and Romanesque periods. Thus, different rocks (marbles,

various facies of limestones, volcanic rocks) used to construct the ancient building were sampled and ana

lysed. All the different kinds of stones were sampled from the Basilica, taking precise reference to the vari

ous construction phases and structural changes of the monument occurred in the centuries.

The sedimentary and volcanic lithologies belong to the local outcrops of Cagliari Miocenic geological for

mation (e.g. limestone) and to other volcanic outcrops of south Sardinia, respectively. By means of a multi

method archaeometric study (mineralogical-petrographic observations on thin sections and 18O vs 13C stable

isotope ratio analysis), the provenance of classical marbles used for manufacturing Roman architectural ele

ments (column shafts, bases, capitals, slabs, etc.) were defined, which are thought to come from extra

regional sources.

The results show that the marbles come mainly from Apuan Alps (Italy) and subordinately from Greek

quarrying areas.

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Published

2023-07-28

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Articles