ROME -- Archaeologists excavating an
ancient tannery believed to be the largest ever found in Rome said
Tuesday they might need to move the entire work site, which is being
threatened by railroad construction.
The 1,255-square-yard
complex includes a tannery dating to the second or third century, as
well as burial sites and part of a Roman road.
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Archeologists
work on the ruins of an ancient Roman tannery dated back to the 2nd-3rd
century A.D. as a train passes in the background, in Rome, Monday, July
31, 2007. The tannery, believed to be one of the largest ever found in
the capital, is threatened by works for the high-speed railway,
archeologist said, and the whole complex could be moved from its
original site to be saved. (AP Photo/Plinio Lepri)
(Plinio Lepri - AP)
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At least 97 tubs, some measuring more than three feet in
diameter, have been dug up so far in the tannery, archaeologists said.
The
complex, located in the Casal Bertone area in the outskirts of Rome,
lies between two tunnels of a high-speed railway being built to link
Rome and Naples, said Stefano Musco, the director of the archaeological
excavations.
"(Even though) there are only 109 yards of railway
left to build, the archaeological complex has no chance of surviving,"
Musco told reporters during a tour of the dig. "Either it stays the way
it is and the works are stopped or, if the railway must be built, these
remains will have to be cut out and rebuilt entirely."
He said they might be moved to a nearby park.
If
the complex is moved, experts would scan the area with a 3-D laser to
help archaeologists replace the items in their exact positions, Musco
said. The archaeologist, who declined to say how much the project would
cost, said technical problems might arise from the fragmentation of the
structures and the vastness of the site.
"This is an ancient industrial area _ not a craftsman's
workshop, but a big complex where several people used to work," he said.
Musco
said the project will have to be approved by the Italian Culture
Ministry. Officials at the ministry said the project would have to be
discussed by a panel of experts.
"I would obviously prefer not to touch anything," Musco said.
"It will be quite frustrating to see this thing being taken away."
The
system of roads that spread from the capital across the ancient empire
is considered one of ancient Rome's greatest engineering feats, and
today's transport networks in Italy often closely follow the routes
chosen by builders two millennia ago.