Sunday, December 22, 2024

Mysterious 4,000-year-old round stone building on Crete hilltop threatens to disrupt the island’s major airport project

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  • The massive structure was found on a Crete hilltop 
  • But the site was meant to host a radar station for a new airport 
  • The government said it would find a new site for the radar station  

A mysterious 4,000-year-old hilltop structure on the Greek island of Crete has threatened to disrupt plans for a major new airport project on the island. 

Resembling a huge car wheel from above, the ruins of the labyrinthine, 19,000-square-foot building came to light during a recent dig by archaeologists.

Experts believe the ‘unique and extremely interesting find’ was built by Crete’s ancient Minoan civilisation, famous for its sumptuous palaces, flamboyant art and enigmatic writing system.

But the site was earmarked for a radar station to serve a new airport under construction near the town of Kastelli.

Set to open in 2027, it is projected to replace Greece‘s second-biggest airport at Heraklion, and designed to handle up to 18 million travellers annually. 

Resembling a huge car wheel from above, the ruins of the labyrinthine, 19,000-square-foot building (pictured) came to light during a recent dig by archaeologists

The site was earmarked for a radar station to serve a new airport under construction near the town of Kastelli

The site was earmarked for a radar station to serve a new airport under construction near the town of Kastelli

It is projected to replace Greece 's second-biggest airport at Heraklion, and designed to handle up to 18 million travellers annually (File image)

It is projected to replace Greece ‘s second-biggest airport at Heraklion, and designed to handle up to 18 million travellers annually (File image)

But Greece’s culture minister Lina Mendoni, an archaeologist, pledged that the find would be preserved while a different location would be sought for the radar station.

‘We all understand the value and importance of cultural heritage… as well as the growth potential’ of the new airport project, she said. ‘It’s possible to go ahead with the airport while granting the antiquities the protection they merit.’

Ringed by eight stepped stone walls more than five feet high, the inner structure was split into smaller, interconnecting spaces and may have had a shallow conical roof.

The ministry’s statement said it did not appear to have been a dwelling, and the finds from inside it included a large quantity of animal bones.

‘It may have been periodically used for possibly ritual ceremonies involving consumption of food, wine, and perhaps offerings,’ the statement said.

‘Its size, architectural layout and careful construction required considerable labour, specialised know-how and a robust central administration,’ it said, adding it was certainly some kind of communal building that stood out in the entire area.

The ministry said the building was mainly used between 2000-1700BC, and was founded around the time Crete’s first palaces were being built – including at Knossos and Phaistos.

It said some of its features were comparable with early Minoan beehive tombs that were surmounted by stepped conical roofs and burial mounds in other parts of Greece.

Greece’s rich cultural heritage often results in conflicts of interest during construction projects.

At the end of the last century, an entire hilltop fortified settlement from the 3rd millennium BC was excavated and then destroyed during construction work for Athens International Airport.

So far, at least another 35 archaeological sites have been uncovered during work on the new Kastelli airport and its road connections, the ministry said.

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