"dc-creator","Chronology","Icon","dc-description","dc-date","dc-subject","UserLevel","Id","dc-publisher","Name","Type","Redirect","dc-title","Collection" "","Last quarter of 5th c. B.C.","","Well at 55/ΚΕ; ; Period of Use dated to the last quarter of 5th c. B.C., Upper fill dated to the same (deposited later) in Agora XXX.","1 April 1938; 18 April-6 May 1938; 17-19 May 1938","","","Agora:Deposit:O 19:4","","O 19:4","Deposit","","Well at 55/ΚΕ","Agora" "","Ca. 420-400 B.C.","","Well to N of Nymphaeum at 115/ΙΣΤ. A good water supply but no evidence for a period of use.; Exceptionally heavy dumped filling, including much fine tableware, many wine- jar fragments and other objects. Some of this material was stained with black or reddish soot as if from industrial activity","8-29 April 1954; 20 June 1954","","","Agora:Deposit:Q 15:2","","Q 15:2","Deposit","","Well to the North of Nymphaeum","Agora" "","Ca. 520-480 B.C.","","Thra (ΘΡΑ) Well (East of Stoa Room 2). Heavy dumped filling, including figured, black and plain wares, and also a quantity of animal bones, mostly skulls of oxen. On many of these the horns had been sawn off sharply near the base; the freshness of the sawn surface suggested that this had been done at the time of slaughtering rather than while the animal was still alive.; This deposit has much in common with the more spectacular Q 12:3; here the black-figure supports the association with the Persian sack.","28 January-6 February 1950","","","Agora:Deposit:R 12:1","","R 12:1","Deposit","","ΘΡΑ Well East of Stoa Room 2","Agora" "","End of 6th c. B.C.","","Well D: Archaic; ; Well on the northwest slope of the Acropolis. Debris filling with scanty pottery remains; most of the pottery is earlier than the lower limit. Diameter at top ca. 1.20m; bottom ca. 1.10m","17-27 February 1937","","","Agora:Deposit:T 24:5","","T 24:5","Deposit","","Well D in ΟΑ","Agora" "","Last quarter of 6th c. B.C.","","Well 6: archaic. Diameter 1.20m; Well on the northwest slope of the Acropolis, below the Klepsydra.; ; There are three fills, all thrown into the unfinished well at the same time (end of 6th- beginning of the 5th c. B.C.), but brought from different pottery dumps. Some of the material probably dates from the end of the 7th c. B.C., and nearly all is earlier than the last quarter of the 6th, but the filling up of the well cannot have taken place before the end of the 6th or even the beginning of the 5h c. B.C.","23 May-3 June 1938","","","Agora:Deposit:U 25:2","","U 25:2","Deposit","","Well 6 in ΟΑ","Agora" "","Ca. 500-440 B.C.","","Packing under cobblestones 7 or 8 meters west of the Temple of Hephaistos. A similar filling found in a small hole in bedrock three or four meters north of the Temple. The high quality of the pottery from this deposit and the fact that some of it shows signs of burning has suggested that it might have come from a sanctuary destroyed by the Persians. But the presence in the filling of a number of ostraka from ostrakaphoria of the eighties indicates that some at east of the debris accumulated elsewhere and was brought in in connection with filling or leveling operations undertaken soon after the Persian defeat. ; ; Agora XXX: This deposit will have to be down-dated to 440 B.C. because of 231, which should be dated ca. 440 B.C. For a similar case, see Agora XXIII, p. 336, S 21:2.","19-30 March 1936","","","Agora:Deposit:D 7:2","","D 7:2","Deposit","","Theseion 'Street' Deposit","Agora" "","Ca. 420-400 B.C.","","Well in the industrial area west of the Areopagus.; A flask-shaped cistern in House H with a dumped fill of the late fifth century brought from elsewhere and evidently deposited sometime in the 3rd c. B.C. Especially to be noted is the stamped Thasian amphora handle SS 9636, one of the earliest stamps recording names of officials.","30 April-11 May 1940","","","Agora:Deposit:D 19:1","","D 19:1","Deposit","","Cistern in House H in ΝΝ","Agora" "","Ca. 375-310 B.C.-Byzantine","","Within the precinct of the Hephaisteion, about 10m. north of the north stylobate of the temple.; ; Flask-shaped pit (W. (bottom) 3.14 x 2.73m) probably originally intended as a cistern; used for dumping waste from a metal furnace. A substantial mass of iron slag found at the bottom along with a thick waste of bricks, charcoal and sand and a quantity of pottery. At 1.60m. a layer of stones, also containing some pottery, had been dumped in over the furnace waste. An upper supplementary fill was of Byzantine material. ; Container 299 represents fill from channel leading from 60/ΛΗ.","23-29 May 1936","","","Agora:Deposit:E 6:3","","E 6:3","Deposit","","Furnace Waste Pit ""Cistern""","Agora"