Evidence of Quarrying at the Iron Age Site of Torre d’en Galmés, Menorca, Spain

  1. A. Pérez-Juez
  2. P. Goldberg
Journal:
Boletín geológico y minero

ISSN: 0366-0176

Year of publication: 2018

Volume: 129

Issue: 1-2

Pages: 353-370

Type: Article

DOI: 10.21701/BOLGEOMIN.129.1.014 DIALNET GOOGLE SCHOLAR lock_openOpen access editor

More publications in: Boletín geológico y minero

Abstract

The island of Menorca (Balearic Islands, Spain) contains numerous megalithic structures (e.g., watchtowers, sanctuaries) and private buildings (e.g., domestic spaces, storage areas). Until recently, archaeological research has concentrated on architecture (and associated material remains), but research on the raw materials (source, method of quarrying and their social implications) in constructing these monuments has been very sparse. This paper summarizes some initial results of our recent excavations at Torre d’en Galmés, which show that the quarrying of limestone was widespread: within buildings, in open spaces between buildings, and beyond the limits of the main occupation of the site. Inhabitants exploited joints and bedding planes in the Miocene limestone that covers the southern half of the island, ignoring softer marls, which have been quarried for construction only since the Roman conquest. The sizes and shapes of the quarried blocks can be used to reflect on social aspects, since quarrying of small blocks within buildings could have been whereas the extraction, transport, and construction of large standing uprights from outside the limits of the site would have required a greater communal effort.

Funding information

We are indebted to Mercedes Planas and Martin Wilson for their mapping and surveying, and to all the students who participated in the BU field school over the years. We thank our colleagues Ricardo Elia and James Wiseman for being the co-directors of the field school for so many years and keeping the students’ spirit up, and to our graduate students who super- vised field and laboratory work, especially Meredith Anderson Langlitz, Alexander Smith, Ilaria Patania, Jonathan Ruane, Marta Ostovich, and Kevin Mullen. We are grateful to our friends and colleagues in Menorca: Elena Sintes, Simón Gornés, and Joana Gual for engaging in discussion about the Talayotic culture. Finally, we thank BU Study Abroad and the Consell Insular de Menorca for financial support.

Funders