Jökull


Jökull - 01.06.2000, Síða 82

Jökull - 01.06.2000, Síða 82
Two books about Santorini Sigurður Steinþórsson Science Institute, University of Iceland, Jarðfræðahúsi v/ Hringbraut, IS-107 Reykjavík FIRE IN THE SEA. The Santorini Volcano: Natural History and the Legend of Atlantis, by Walter L. Friedrich. Translated from German by Alexander R. McBirney. Cambridge University Press; 2000. 258 pp. “I never read a book before reviewing it - it prejudices a man so,“said the Rev. Sydney Smith (1771-1845), and sometimes this may be a tempting attitude. But not in the present case: Fire in the Sea represents a fascinating account of geological and historical asp- ects of this jewel of the Aegean, the island of Santor- ini. Indeed, in ancient times this island used to be cal- led ‘Calliste’, the most beautiful. Santorini is one of several volcanic islands in the Aegean Sea. Most of them are located along an arch overlying the 170 km isobath of the Benioff zone separating the African and Eurasian crustal plates. The core of Santorini, however, is made of metamorp- hosed sediment laid down up to 200 million years ago. Volcanic activity can be traced 1.6 million ye- ars back, including five major Plinian eruptions. The last of these eruptions - the Minoan eruption 1650 BC - produced the thick layer of white pumice which so characterizes Santorini and makes it quite unlike any other place on Earth. In the 1860s, during the construction of the Suez Canal, the pumice - ‘pozzol- ana’ - was quarried in great quantities and shipped to Port Said for making cement. To everyone’s surprise, a ‘Bronze Age Pompeii’ was unearthed in one of the quarries, remains of a lost civilization buried beneath the thick pumice. And already in 1872 the idea was put forward that Santorini was in fact Atlantis, Plato’s mythical island which sank into the sea in cataclysmic earthquakes and floods. Sporadic archaeological excavations continued in the 19th and 20th centuries and more ruins were found beneath the pumice. The present phase of archaeological research on Santorini began in 1969 when the Greek archaeologist Spyrodon Marinatos started his work near the village Akrotiri in the south part of the island. “From the beginning,” Friedrich writes, “his extensive excavations at Akrot- iri quickly led to almost daily sensational disco- veries, including multi-stored houses embellished with admirable frescoes and painted ceramics. Cle- arly, a very significant site had been uncovered, per- haps the most important in Greece of the century.” It was Marinatos who first suggested in 1939 that the demise of the Minoan civilization in Crete, unearthed by Arthur Evans at Knossos in the early 20th Cent- ury, was actually a consequence of the eruption of Santorini. However, it is now clear that, although the eruption played great havoc in and around the eastern Mediterranean, it did not destroy the Minoan culture in Crete which was to survive another half millenni- um. That culture, as described by Evans, was cent- ered on the palace of Knossos and was in many ways a Bronze-Age replica of upper-class Victorian Eng- land. Interestingly, the German geologist H. G. Wund- erlich, working in Crete, started having misgivings about Evans’ interpretation of the Knossos ruins. He subsequently published a book, The Secret of Crete (English version 1975), in which he argues quite con- vincingly that Knossos was in fact not a palace but a necropolis, a city of the dead. In 1969 the first International Scientific Congress on the Volcano Thera was held in Athens and Santor- ini, assembling 140 scientists of various disciplines from 15 countries. The Icelandic volcanologist S. Thorarinsson attended the conference and published the following year a comprehensive review article in an Icelandic journal: Er Atlantisgátan að leysast? (Is the Atlantis riddle being solved?, Andvari, 1970: 55- 84) in which he drew on research results from the JÖKULL No. 49 81
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