Abstract

The extensive ancient harbor installations — today submerged — on the seafront of Kolona in Aegina are associated with the great trading and maritime development of the island from the Middle Bronze Age to the Middle Classical period.Based on geomorphological and archeological indications, three distinct relative sea levels can be defined at depths of 3.17±0.05m, 0.97±0.05m and 0.52±0.05m. The dating of the sea level changes based on archeological evidence and historical sources shows that the initial sea level change in Aegina occurred certainly after AD170 and most likely after AD250. The intermediate change is dated between AD1586 and AD1839, and the most recent change occurred between 1839 and 1999. A transgression followed a long period of sea level stability that lasted at least 2200years, from the Middle Bronze Age (ca. 3900yr BP) to the Late Roman period (ca. 1700yr BP).According to the paleogeographical reconstruction of the coast, the ancient harbor installations stretch along 1600m of coastline. The north harbor is bounded by the north breakwater, the riprap on the once wide sandy coast, the detached west breakwater, and the uplift morphology of the west end of Kolona Hill. On the south coast, the harbor installations comprise the fortified “closed harbor” with the shipsheds, the commercial harbor, which is entirely destroyed by the modern port, the anchorage area that is bounded by the west breakwater and built of cone-shaped piles of stones, the tops of which once projected above the sea level, and the south curved breakwater at its southernmost boundary.

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