"Type","Name","Redirect","dc-description","dc-subject","dc-publisher","dc-creator","Id","Icon","Chronology","Collection","dc-date","UserLevel","dc-title" "Deposit","L 17:1","","","","","","Agora:Deposit:L 17:1","","7th-9th c. A.D.","Agora","17-23 April 1958","","Well B" "Deposit","L 17:3","","Located in Room IV, strosis 3, of SW House. Archaic, later disturbed, filling in and over undug well.","","","","Agora:Deposit:L 17:3","","6th-5th c. B.C.","Agora","21 March 1958; 2-3 May 1958","","Well B" "Deposit","L 18:1","","A well lined with a very well built stone wall, carefully made and fitted to the curve of the well cutting, with footholds running down its N and S faces. This wall, of small stones, runs to 7.30m. from the well mouth. Below that the well is lines with drums of tiles. At the east side at the surface, a beam cutting was made to hold a beam to support a brick vault over the mouth of the well. The vault collapsed just after the well was discovered. Behind the tile lining a cavity filled with nearly whole amphorae used to prop sides.; The fill seems to be Hellenistic.; ; Digging abandoned at -11.76m. due to collapse.","","","","Agora:Deposit:L 18:1","","","Agora","23-29 March 1937","","Well" "Deposit","M 17:1","","Use filling of middle of 1st to late 6th c. (Roman Group M); dumped filling of 9th and 10th c. Down to a depth of about 21.00m. the fill of the well contained very few objects, the latest of them being of the early Byzantine period (10th c. A.D.?). At 21.00m. there was a sudden change and very late Roman objects began to appear in great numbers.; ; See nbp. 786 for a note on the disposition of some uncatalogued material into a modern well.","FixChildren","","","Agora:Deposit:M 17:1","Agora:Image:2000.02.0978::/Agora/2000/2000.02/2000.02.0978.tif::2029::1317","1st-6th c. A.D.","Agora","13 March-15 April 1937","","Well" "Deposit","M 17:7","","Rectangular pit at 54/ΛΓ.; The pit's plan is irregular; its measurements approximately 2.00x1.10x1.15m. The wall foundations run a little over a meter deep at 53/ΛΓ-ΛΕ, consist of irregularly shaped and sized stones packed together roughly in courses with clay, and in the southwest corner of the pit follow the bedrock. Some stones have been cut so as to have regular faces; some have not. On top of these rest two good sized poros blocks which once supported the first blocks of the house wall. The south wall of the pit is built of slightly smaller stones and clay (no poros blocks), and bonds with the west wall. The east wall is one large (2.00x1.14x0.22m) poros slab. Its west or inner face has been roughly finished. the east or outer face has had a margin cut into it on two sides. The shape of the slab and the work done on it are irregular, and one may suppose that the slab was badly begun, found not to suit its original purpose, and so used here. The north wall, of which only a few stones were left, would have been like the south wall.; The pit was filled with a homogeneous, wet, clay-like earth. At the bottom of the pit lay an archaic kore fragment. The pit was not used again after the earth had been dumped into it, but the walls of the building were used intermittently, if not continuously, to provide shelter for more than half a millenium afterwards.","","","","Agora:Deposit:M 17:7","","Ca. 450-425 B.C.","Agora","15 April 1957","","Pit"