Ancient Greek well yields rare wooden statue

Archeologists in Greece have uncovered a rare wooden statue preserved in the muddy depths of an ancient well in Piraeus, the port of Athens.

A Culture Ministry statement said Tuesday that the roughly half-meter (20-inch) high dressed male figure was found without its head, hands and feet, together with broken pottery dating to about 100-86 B.C. It was unclear who the statue might depict.

The piece was found during an excavation of ancient wells in central Piraeus, where a new subway line will be built.

Ancient wooden artefacts are uncommon discoveries in Greece as do not favor their preservation.

The ministry statement said the well also contained part of an ancient marble statue of a woman seated on a deer.

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Citation: Ancient Greek well yields rare wooden statue (2014, October 21) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2014-10-ancient-greek-yields-rare-wooden.html
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