The work is part of a project supported by research grants from Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research PRIN 2010 “Rupestrian art and habitat in Cappadocia (Turkey) and in central and southern Italy. Rock, excavated architecture, painting: between knowledge, preservation and enhancement”. Cappadocia Region (Turkey) is famous for its geological landscape and rupestrian churches carved in “fairy chimneys” produced by erosion of Miocene-Pliocene ignimbrites (La Russa et al., 2014); the area has been included in UNESCO World Heritage List since 1985 thanks to its uniqueness.
The mortars of the Forty Martyrs rupestrian complex in Cappadocia (Turkey): an archaeological and archaeometric integrated study
Rovella N.
;
2016
Abstract
The work is part of a project supported by research grants from Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research PRIN 2010 “Rupestrian art and habitat in Cappadocia (Turkey) and in central and southern Italy. Rock, excavated architecture, painting: between knowledge, preservation and enhancement”. Cappadocia Region (Turkey) is famous for its geological landscape and rupestrian churches carved in “fairy chimneys” produced by erosion of Miocene-Pliocene ignimbrites (La Russa et al., 2014); the area has been included in UNESCO World Heritage List since 1985 thanks to its uniqueness.File in questo prodotto:
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