FOLD&R the Journal of Fasti Online
FOLD&R is an archaeological journal published since 2004 by the International Association for Classical Archaeology in collaboration with the Italian Ministry of Heritage and Cultural Activities.
The journal is dedicated to the proposition that reports on all excavations should be easily available to the general public. It is a peer-reviewed journal, with an editorial board that covers all of the archaeological disciplines. We welcome illustrated submissions, in English, Italian, French, Spanish or German, on recent Italian excavations or geophysical or surface surveys of individual sites. We guarantee a rapid review of the material, which, after any agreed changes, should be published within a month. Two sets of proofs will be submitted for correction by the authors. The reviewers are asked to address the scientific validity and presentation of the submission rather than the scale or importance of the excavation; all excavations are important. No translation is offered, but we are willing to advise on translators for anyone who wishes to publish their text in another language.
An on-line journal follows the same rules as those on paper from both an academic and a juridical point of view. Publications on FOLD&R are thus valid from the point of view of a personal curriculum and should be cited just like other publications. The law protects the intellectual property of the author and the journal. Texts are published in a pdf format, and they can be consulted online, with Acrobat Reader, and downloaded for printing and circulation to colleagues. Texts can be republished by their authors (although only by the authors) without permission from the review; however, we request that the first publication be credited to FOLD&R.
Texts and illustrations, in colour or black and white, should be sent to Helga Di Giuseppe, Piazza San Marco 49, Rome 00186 (tel. 39-06 68683399), or by email to helga.digiuseppe@aiac.org, The illustrations may be sent either as digital or paper files. If the site in question is not already part of the Fasti Online it must be accompanied by a completed Record Sheet.
We will register each FOLD&R article at the CNR central library, the Biblioteca Centrale “G. Marconi”, that has established a database, SOLAR, which registers the deposition of digital scientific publications. Registration and certification by the CNR guarantees the author and the preservation of the work. We assume that the authors of submissions will authorize the deposition of their texts [http://eprints.bice.rm.cnr.it]. The authors will receive, via email, the certificate of deposition, which can be annexed to their own FOLD&R for distribution.
FOLD&R Homepage [http://bit.ly/1Gh4Pui]
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Archaeological Conservation Series
Fasti Online Documents & Research, Archaeological Conservation, is a peer-reviewed, online journal containing articles which report on recent interventions in archaeological conservation, as well as experimental and theoretical work – although we do prefer links to specific projects. For each article published we will need a record sheet for the Fasti Online Archaeological Conservation database, an abstract in English, and a text of no more than 25 pages, with a maximum of 25 illustrations. Please consult the notes for contributors. We aim to publish all accepted contributions within a month of their peer review.
Please send all contributions to the Editorial Secretary, fasticonservation@iccrom.org.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Survey Fold&r Series
The Survey series is dedicated to the proposition that reports on all field surveys should be easily available to the general public. It is a peer-reviewed journal, with an editorial board that covers all of the archaeological disciplines. We welcome illustrated submissions, in English, Italian, French, Spanish or German, on field survey archaeology.
Texts under 25 pages and illustrations, in colour or black and white, should be sent to by email to Jitte Waagen (j.waagen@uva.nl). The illustrations must be sent as a digital file. If the survey project in question is not already part of the Fasti Online it must be accompanied by a completed Record Sheet.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Supervisors: Stefano De Caro, Elizabeth Fentress, Helga Di Giuseppe, Maria Teresa Jaquinta, and Jitte Waagen
Phone: 39-06 68683399
Address: Piazza San Marco, 49 - 00186, Rome (Italy)
The journal is dedicated to the proposition that reports on all excavations should be easily available to the general public. It is a peer-reviewed journal, with an editorial board that covers all of the archaeological disciplines. We welcome illustrated submissions, in English, Italian, French, Spanish or German, on recent Italian excavations or geophysical or surface surveys of individual sites. We guarantee a rapid review of the material, which, after any agreed changes, should be published within a month. Two sets of proofs will be submitted for correction by the authors. The reviewers are asked to address the scientific validity and presentation of the submission rather than the scale or importance of the excavation; all excavations are important. No translation is offered, but we are willing to advise on translators for anyone who wishes to publish their text in another language.
An on-line journal follows the same rules as those on paper from both an academic and a juridical point of view. Publications on FOLD&R are thus valid from the point of view of a personal curriculum and should be cited just like other publications. The law protects the intellectual property of the author and the journal. Texts are published in a pdf format, and they can be consulted online, with Acrobat Reader, and downloaded for printing and circulation to colleagues. Texts can be republished by their authors (although only by the authors) without permission from the review; however, we request that the first publication be credited to FOLD&R.
Texts and illustrations, in colour or black and white, should be sent to Helga Di Giuseppe, Piazza San Marco 49, Rome 00186 (tel. 39-06 68683399), or by email to helga.digiuseppe@aiac.org, The illustrations may be sent either as digital or paper files. If the site in question is not already part of the Fasti Online it must be accompanied by a completed Record Sheet.
We will register each FOLD&R article at the CNR central library, the Biblioteca Centrale “G. Marconi”, that has established a database, SOLAR, which registers the deposition of digital scientific publications. Registration and certification by the CNR guarantees the author and the preservation of the work. We assume that the authors of submissions will authorize the deposition of their texts [http://eprints.bice.rm.cnr.it]. The authors will receive, via email, the certificate of deposition, which can be annexed to their own FOLD&R for distribution.
FOLD&R Homepage [http://bit.ly/1Gh4Pui]
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Archaeological Conservation Series
Fasti Online Documents & Research, Archaeological Conservation, is a peer-reviewed, online journal containing articles which report on recent interventions in archaeological conservation, as well as experimental and theoretical work – although we do prefer links to specific projects. For each article published we will need a record sheet for the Fasti Online Archaeological Conservation database, an abstract in English, and a text of no more than 25 pages, with a maximum of 25 illustrations. Please consult the notes for contributors. We aim to publish all accepted contributions within a month of their peer review.
Please send all contributions to the Editorial Secretary, fasticonservation@iccrom.org.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Survey Fold&r Series
The Survey series is dedicated to the proposition that reports on all field surveys should be easily available to the general public. It is a peer-reviewed journal, with an editorial board that covers all of the archaeological disciplines. We welcome illustrated submissions, in English, Italian, French, Spanish or German, on field survey archaeology.
Texts under 25 pages and illustrations, in colour or black and white, should be sent to by email to Jitte Waagen (j.waagen@uva.nl). The illustrations must be sent as a digital file. If the survey project in question is not already part of the Fasti Online it must be accompanied by a completed Record Sheet.
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Supervisors: Stefano De Caro, Elizabeth Fentress, Helga Di Giuseppe, Maria Teresa Jaquinta, and Jitte Waagen
Phone: 39-06 68683399
Address: Piazza San Marco, 49 - 00186, Rome (Italy)
less
Related Authors
Gabriele Gattiglia
University of Pisa
Francesca Anichini
University of Pisa
ArcheoLogica Data
University of Pisa
Salvatore Basile
University of Pisa
Benedetta Marcucci
University of Pisa
Germana Sorrentino
University of Pisa
Alberto Caroti
Università degli Studi "La Sapienza" di Roma
Fabio Fabiani
Università di Pisa
InterestsView All (13)
Uploads
Papers by FOLD&R the Journal of Fasti Online
attested.
The research has highlighted a complex architectural complex, composed of a series of rooms that develop around a large courtyard area, characterized by gravel and brick leveling, inside which there were three wells, a pair of drainage channels, a quadrangular basin and structures that indicate, further north, service, productive or artisanal activities. In the southern sector, partially underground rooms were identified, equipped with floor coverings and a heating system with suspensurae and praefurnium.
The research is still ongoing, however, from a first analysis of the data collected, the complex seems to date between the 2nd BC and the 2nd century AD, with evidence of spoliation up to the end of the 4th century AD.
spettro elettromagnetico ed elaborando le immagini mediante l’uso degli indici di vegetazione è possibile identificare le minime variazioni nelle condizioni fisiologiche delle piante prodotte da resti sepolti e invisibili all’occhio umano.
L’applicazione di questa tecnica a partire dal 2017 – e dal 2020 nell’ambito delle ricerche dell’Insegnamento di Civiltà dell’Italia preromana ed Etruscologia della Sapienza Università di Roma – presso l’area urbana di Veio, ed in particolare nella porzione nordoccidentale del plateau corrispondente al toponimo di Campetti, ha dimostrato come sia possibile identificare una notevole quantità di cropmark.
L’integrazione dei dati ottenuti tramite questa metodologia con quelli provenienti dal riesame degli scavi e ricerche pregresse, il cui studio è attualmente in corso mediante ricerche d’archivio, ha permesso di arricchire significativamente e approfondire la conoscenza e la comprensione dello sviluppo del paesaggio urbano in un'ampia porzione della città antica.
and at least 135 km with side branches, made it the longest Roman aqueduct of the time. It was also the only one to supply several cities.
Researches carried out in the 16th and 19th centuries asserted the existence of an important side branch that ran along the Posillipo ridge towards Fuorigrotta-Coroglio; it is assumed to have reached the island of Nisida via a channel-bridge. This branch would be about 5 km long, but only a 250 m long section was known in the Discesa Coroglio area, near the Nisida end. Only in 2019 another section about 270 m long was explored, still near Discesa Coroglio.
At the beginning of 2023, thanks to the authorization by the Extraordinary Commissioner for the Reclamation of Bagnoli, and with the collaboration of the facility management Invitalia company, the Cocceivs Association found a previously lost section in an excellent state of conservation. The development reaches 800 meters; this qualifies it as the longest known
segment of the Aqua Augusta, also showing fourteen horizontal accesses (adits).
The paper reports preliminary information on the new aqueduct section, with details on the adits and the channel and some information on the expected water flow amount.
attested.
The research has highlighted a complex architectural complex, composed of a series of rooms that develop around a large courtyard area, characterized by gravel and brick leveling, inside which there were three wells, a pair of drainage channels, a quadrangular basin and structures that indicate, further north, service, productive or artisanal activities. In the southern sector, partially underground rooms were identified, equipped with floor coverings and a heating system with suspensurae and praefurnium.
The research is still ongoing, however, from a first analysis of the data collected, the complex seems to date between the 2nd BC and the 2nd century AD, with evidence of spoliation up to the end of the 4th century AD.
spettro elettromagnetico ed elaborando le immagini mediante l’uso degli indici di vegetazione è possibile identificare le minime variazioni nelle condizioni fisiologiche delle piante prodotte da resti sepolti e invisibili all’occhio umano.
L’applicazione di questa tecnica a partire dal 2017 – e dal 2020 nell’ambito delle ricerche dell’Insegnamento di Civiltà dell’Italia preromana ed Etruscologia della Sapienza Università di Roma – presso l’area urbana di Veio, ed in particolare nella porzione nordoccidentale del plateau corrispondente al toponimo di Campetti, ha dimostrato come sia possibile identificare una notevole quantità di cropmark.
L’integrazione dei dati ottenuti tramite questa metodologia con quelli provenienti dal riesame degli scavi e ricerche pregresse, il cui studio è attualmente in corso mediante ricerche d’archivio, ha permesso di arricchire significativamente e approfondire la conoscenza e la comprensione dello sviluppo del paesaggio urbano in un'ampia porzione della città antica.
and at least 135 km with side branches, made it the longest Roman aqueduct of the time. It was also the only one to supply several cities.
Researches carried out in the 16th and 19th centuries asserted the existence of an important side branch that ran along the Posillipo ridge towards Fuorigrotta-Coroglio; it is assumed to have reached the island of Nisida via a channel-bridge. This branch would be about 5 km long, but only a 250 m long section was known in the Discesa Coroglio area, near the Nisida end. Only in 2019 another section about 270 m long was explored, still near Discesa Coroglio.
At the beginning of 2023, thanks to the authorization by the Extraordinary Commissioner for the Reclamation of Bagnoli, and with the collaboration of the facility management Invitalia company, the Cocceivs Association found a previously lost section in an excellent state of conservation. The development reaches 800 meters; this qualifies it as the longest known
segment of the Aqua Augusta, also showing fourteen horizontal accesses (adits).
The paper reports preliminary information on the new aqueduct section, with details on the adits and the channel and some information on the expected water flow amount.
The conservation work of the bath represents the earliest known use of traditional and local material and labour in conservation project in the country, as well as its consolidation and preparation for display.