Coring for Ithaca
Adler deWind reports from the Greek island of Kefalonia on progress towards proving - or disproving - the theory that the Paliki Peninsula was once separated from the main island and was the true geographical location of Homer’s Ithaca.
Geoscientist 20.12 December 2010/January 2011
Despite a clear reference in Homer to “rocky Ithaca” being the westernmost, low-lying Ionian Island, controversy has long surrounded the location of Odysseus’s Homeland1,2.
Three years after their initial support of the geoscientific investigation and work program into testing whether the western peninsula of Kefalonia (Paliki) could have been that free-standing island three millennia ago (Fig.1), the geotechnical company Fugro have now committed to drilling and coring boreholes in 15 locations. If successful, the coring program has the potential to settle the centuries old classical Greek dispute3,4.
While the selected borehole sites focus upon rockfall deposits in key areas in the Thinia Valley (Fig.2) through which the proposed ancient marine channel would have run, the locations also include others at Atheras Bay and Livadi marsh (Fig.3). The latter will sample estuarine bay-fill sediments and thus, provide valuable new insights and understanding of the role that tectonics and climate had in modifying the effects of Holocene transgression in the most active part of the Hellenic arc-trench system.
Of the 15 sites, 13 will be continuously cored (Fig.5) and in total the project expects to collect around a kilometre of sediment. Those cores will be shipped to Fugro Robertson’s dedicated core facility in North Wales, where they will be logged, sampled and analysed to reconstruct the depositional history and dated using biostratigraphy and radiocarbon methods.
As well as land coring, there is contingency for a marine coring campaign to supplement the onshore studies. If initial results of the land boreholes are encouraging, the project will use expertise from another Fugro affiliate, namely Falmouth-based SeaCore. This company will provide a self-propelled barge to drill and core beneath the Gulf of Livadi and enable important calibration of the sediments detected by the project’s 2007 seismic reflection survey3.All being well, results of the new analyses should be available in late 2011, when it will become clearer whether the uncertainty concerning the site of ancient Ithaca has finally been laid to rest.
References
- Bittlestone et al., 2005. Odysseus Unbound: The Search for Homer's Ithaca. Cambridge University Press. 618 pages, 340 colour illustrations. ISBN: 0521853575
- Underhill, J.R. 2006. Quest for Ithaca. Geoscientist 16 (9), 4-29.
- Underhill, J.R. 2008. Testing Classical Enigmas. Geoscientist, 18 (9), 20-27
- Underhill, J.R. 2009. Relocating Odysseus' Homeland. Nature Geoscience, 2, 455-458





