Greece: New bid to understand prehistoric engineering feat
ATHENS, Greece — New excavations at an unusual prehistoric fortress northwest of Athens could hold the key to understanding one of ancient Greece’s most impressive engineering feats, which converted a lake into rich farmland 3,300 years ago.
The acropolis of Glas, with its three-kilometre (1.9-mile) fortification walls, is the biggest of its era in Greece. It dates to the same time as the nearby land reclamation works and was an integral part of the overall project.
But both were abandoned only a few decades later, possibly due to a changing climate, and never re-used.
According to Greece’s Culture Ministry, the results of the past two years’ work at Glas, a low, flat hill in the corner of a large plain some 115 kilometres (70 miles) from Athens, have been “particularly encouraging.”