Space Industry and Business News  
Japanese scientists seek quake secrets in Parthenon design

The Parthenon has sustained significant damage in its long history but most of it was caused by man, not nature.
by Staff Writers
Athens (AFP) Aug 22, 2008
Japanese scientists will next month look into seismic resistance secrets in the design of the 2,500-year-old Parthenon which has withstood scores of quakes, a senior Greek archaeologist said on Friday.

"The Parthenon had great resilience to earthquakes, as did most classical Greek temples," Maria Ioannidou, the archeologist in charge of conservation on the ancient Acropolis citadel where the Parthenon stands, told AFP.

"The ancient Greeks apparently had very good knowledge of quake behaviour and excellent construction quality," she added.

Toshikazu Hanazato, a professor of engineering at Japan's Mie University and an expert in post-quake reconstruction, heads the Japanese research team which is visiting Greece next month to study the famed marble temple.

Both countries are very seismically active and the Japanese believe there are common elements between ancient Greek temples and their own monuments, Ioannidou said.

The Parthenon has sustained significant damage in its long history but most of it was caused by man, not nature.

The temple is partly built on solid rock but also has stone foundations going 12 metres (39 feet) deep and its walls were held together by metal joints coated in lead to prevent rust, Ioannidou said.

It withstood a 373 BCE quake that destroyed the city of Elike in the Peloponnese and a subsequent 226 BC temblor that toppled the Colossus of Rhodes, the gigantic bronze statue numbered among the Seven Wonders of the ancient world.

More recently, a 5.9-Richter earthquake in 1999 that killed 143 people around Athens shifted some of the Parthenon's architectural elements but caused no major damage.

Related Links
Bringing Order To A World Of Disasters
A world of storm and tempest
When the Earth Quakes



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Florida asks for disaster declaration due to Tropical Storm Fay
Miami (AFP) Aug 21, 2008
Florida Governor Charlie Crist has asked federal authorities to declare his state a disaster area after heavy rains dumped by Tropical Storm Fay, which lingered Thursday over the northern and eastern part of the state.







  • Tiny nation of Niue gets laptop for every child
  • 'Phoney' queues used to spur Polish iPhone launch
  • Yahoo mixes old and new in Internet-age news service
  • 'Cloud computing' trend heightens privacy risks

  • Inmarsat Selects ILS Proton To Launch S-Band Satellite For Europe
  • Forecast International Projects 50 Billion Dollar ELV Market
  • Successful Launch For Third Inmarsat-4 Satellite
  • Russian Rocket To Launch US Commercial Satellite August 19

  • The M2-F1 - An Aircraft Without Wings
  • China's Tianjin building runway for Airbus test flights: report
  • NASA evaluates new wing sensor
  • Russia And China May Co-Design New Passenger Plane

  • Satellite's Data Collection Will Support Warfighter
  • Boeing Awarded E-6B Upgrade Contract
  • Defense Support Program Satellite Decommissioned
  • Raytheon Bids For USAF Command And Control Contract

  • Key Advance Toward Micro-Spacecraft
  • MIT's Lincoln Lab Upgrades Sputnik-Era Antenna
  • New Metamaterials Bend Light Backwards
  • GMV Releases Hifly 6 Satellite Control System

  • Chris Smith Named Director Of Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
  • AsiaSat Appoints New General Manager China
  • NASA names aeronautics administrator
  • Edwin Miller Leads Reusable Solid Rocket Booster Project

  • GOCE To Look At The Earth Surface And Core
  • Tropical Storm Fay's Center Now Moving Inland
  • Saharan Dry, Dusty Air Lessened Intensity Of 2007 Hurricane Season
  • Ball Aerospace Begins Final Prep For NPOESS OMPS Instrument

  • Improved Satellite Navigation For Remote Areas
  • DPRK Applies Space Information Science Into Economy
  • First Of 300 GE China Mainline Locomotives To Arrive In China
  • Business Benefits Drive Fleet Management Systems Growth

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement