Daniel Diffendale - Portrait

Daniel P. Diffendale

Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Rome Prize
September 9, 2019–April 3, 2020
Profession
Research Fellow, Department of Ancient Mediterranean Studies, University of Missouri
Project title
Quarry Provenance and Archaeological Dating of the Roman-Area Tuffs in Antiquity (QUADRATA)
Project description

Ancient Roman architecture has a global legacy, but its early development was shaped by highly specific local factors. A crucial feature in this development was exploitation of the various volcanic stones (tuffs) found within a twenty-five-kilometer radius of the center of Rome. Already in the Archaic period, the tuff bedrock of Rome’s seven hills was being quarried for architectural use; by the Late Republic at the latest, Roman architects were building with a variety of tuffs quarried well beyond the city’s limits, some from the territories of bested former rivals. Macroscopic identification is insufficient to distinguish between the various varieties of tuff; only geochemical analysis can reliably pinpoint provenance. Trace elements with a relatively low mobility can be successfully used to recognize eruptive products and their provenance. A campaign of sampling buildings and quarry locales in Rome and environs followed by chemical analysis will offer a new picture of early Roman architecture.