Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 September 2013
The site of Knossos was occupied more or less continuously from c. 6000 B.C. (earliest neolithic) until the Arab conquest in A.D. 828, a time-span which represents almost 70 per cent of the Holocene or post-glacial period. It therefore offers a rare opportunity for studying the longterm interaction between man and his environment at a single settlement site. At present there is insufficient data to allow comprehensive analysis of the evolution of settlement, economy, and environment at Knossos, and this paper is intended only as a preliminary step towards such a study. In part I aspects of the physical geography of the Knossos area are described, and in part II they are considered in terms of the site's resource base and location. The geomorphological history of the Kairatos valley is used to illustrate the changing relationships between man and environment during the last two millennia.
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33 Wartime air photographs of the Knossos area at scales of 1:50,000 and 1:13,000 (including stereo pairs) exist in the collection of the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford. Copies of these have been placed in the British School at Athens.
34 All colours taken on damp sediment using the Munsell Color Charts.
35 See Appendix.
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39 I am grateful to Susan Walker for information regarding the aqueduct systems of Knossos.
40 Earlier water systems (e.g. Minoan) seem to have obtained water from close to Knossos itself and been smaller in scale. PM ii. 462, etc.
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