icon

[Notebook Page] Χ-6-62 (pp. 1114-1115)

More on Water Channel; Drain 3, Cistern Manhole and Wall ... Χ-6 1114, 1115 ... More on Water Channel; Drain 3, Cistern Manhole and Wall

icon

[Report Page] 1946 Χ, s. 4

Cistern System C. Cistern. Well. Roman Period; Water Channel and Drain 3 ... 1946 Χ M 20:1 M 20:4 M 18:1 M 19:1 ... Roman Period; Water Channel and Drain 3

[Deposit] F 9:3: Water Channel

Water channel in scarp above Bouleuterion Plateia; north passage, from mouth ... Latest 2nd or early 1st c. B.C.

[Deposit] B 10:3: Channel Mouth 5

Water channel in north part of section. Hellenistic and Early Roman pottery. No inventoried finds ... 13-14 March 1936

[Deposit] D 10:3: Channel Mouth 3

Water channel in north part of section. Coins: 20 February 1936 #2-#3 Five stamped amphora handles; Type 48 A lamp; one-third of bowls long-petal; one long-petal mold ... Second half of 3rd c.-Early third quarter of 2nd c.

icon

[Image] 2012.47.1097 (Section Χ 97)

Patch in Wall, Water Channel (=part of Drain 3), Cistern Channel and Manhole. After socle removed. Hole in patch. Cistern Channel already partially refilled ... AMS Horizontal (normal) ... Patch in Wall, Water Channel (=part of Drain 3), Cistern Channel and Manhole. ... Cistern Channel already partially refilled.

icon

[Image] 2012.47.1098 (Section Χ 98)

Patch in Wall, Water Channel (=part of Drain 3), Cistern Channel and Manhole. After socle removed. Hole in patch. Cistern Channel already partially refilled ... AMS Horizontal (normal) ... Patch in Wall, Water Channel (=part of Drain 3), Cistern Channel and Manhole. ... Cistern Channel already partially refilled.

[Deposit] E 5:4: Channel F, water deposit

Drain channel system along the line of an ancient north-south road, the channel in part at the surface and in part tunneled and accessible by shafts. Over a considerable part of this channel the hard water ... 2nd-early 3rd c. A.D ... Drain channel system along the line of an ancient north-south road, the channel in part at the surface and in part tunneled and accessible by shafts. Over a considerable part of this channel the hard water deposit at the bottom, belonging to the period of use, is consistently of the second and early third centuries, although coins of Gallienus in the upper part of the filling show that the channel was not abandoned before the time of the Heruli. The channel actually extends over a considerable area (E-F 5-6).