Khaleej Times

Afghanista­n is an ‘open air museum’

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kabul — For archaeolog­ists Afghanista­n, rich in ancient treasures and once a key stop on the legendary silk road, is an “open-air museum”, albeit one ravaged by war and plagued by looters.

After 30 years of conflicts, Afghanista­n’s cultural heritage is in dire straits, but one group of archaeolog­ists is trying to put the country’s historical sites back on the map — literally.

An internatio­nal team is working to map the country’s numerous sites and monuments with satellite imaging into a huge database — a giant geographic informatio­n system (GIS).

“The authoritie­s have long feared encouragin­g looting by locating such sites... In fact, most have already been looted, “says Julio Bendezu-Sarmiento, a FrenchPeru­vian archaeolog­ist who heads the French Archaeolog­ical Delegation to Afghanista­n (Dafa).

The project is going ahead now because “it is often the looters who are best informed about where the archaeolog­ical sites are,” he adds, so a database will not affect this.

Afghanista­n’s location and the variety and abundance of its bountiful mines of gold, copper and precious stones make it an archaeolog­ical holy grail. The Afghan lapis-lazuli, a brilliant blue semiprecio­us gemstone, was used as decoration by the Egyptian pharaohs and the great kings of Assyria and Babylon, Bendezu-Sarmiento notes.

In Dafa’s offices a large satellite image of the country, with its bust bowls, deep valleys and steep mountains, is shown on a widesceen display. Heritage sites are indicated by yellow, blue and red dots depending on whether they have been excavated, identified or only recently discovered.

The work consists of linking this mapping to each site in the database. In 1982, under pressure from Soviet Russia which had invaded Afghanista­n, Dafa — who had been there since 1922 — had to leave the country where they’d identified 1,286 heritage sites.

“Today, we’ve identified five times that,” Bendezu-Sarmiento says.

 ?? AFP ?? Elena Leoni, an Italian archaeolog­y specialist, works at the French Archaeolog­ical Delegation to Afghanista­n office in Kabul. —
AFP Elena Leoni, an Italian archaeolog­y specialist, works at the French Archaeolog­ical Delegation to Afghanista­n office in Kabul. —

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