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2000-year-old Roman gold mine discovered in Spain

London: Archaeologists have discovered a vast gold mining network created by the Romans 2,000 years ago in Spain with the help of a laser system attached to an aircraft.
Researchers from the University of Salamanca made the discovery from the air with an airborne laser teledetection system.

Las Medulas in Leon is considered to be the largest opencast goldmine of the Roman Empire, but the search for this metal extended many kilometres further south-east to the Erica river valley, researchers said.

“The volume of earth exploited is much greater than previously thought and the works performed are impressive, having achieved actual river captures, which makes this valley extremely important in the context of Roman mining in the north-east of the Iberian Peninsula,” Javier Fernandez Lozano, from the University of Salamanca and study co-author, said.

The specialists consider that the systems for the transport and storage of water were copied from those already existing in North Africa, where the Egyptians had been employing them for centuries.

Researchers said the real discoverer was the LiDAR technology: “Unlike traditional aerial photography, this airborne laser detection system allows the visualisation of archaeological remains under vegetation cover or intensely ploughed areas.”

The data obtained is represented by point clouds, which are processed with a piece of software to construct a cartographic model where the forms are identified, such as old reservoirs or channels.

The study of Roman mining in the Eria valley is the first piece of ‘geo-archaeology’ performed with LiDAR in Spain.

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