The Marbles - Area 8 - Bigio africanato
This variegated type of africano marble was probably already exhausted by the Flavian period (late 1st century AD), by which time the quarries were only producing a greyish variety rarely traversed by red veins, as attested by the numerous blocks still present at the extraction site of Karagöl near Teos.
The fragments of inlaid column (A-B, X) are unique today and also provide evidence of the complex and laborious attempt to artificially recreate the original polychromy of africano marble, by then difficult to find, by inserting small curved pieces of the rosso brecciata variety into a grey-coloured shaft.
See also:
- The marbles
- The Marbles - Area 1 - Various white marbles
- The Marbles - Area 2 - Africano (marmor luculleum)
- The Marbles - Area 3 - Africano (marmor luculleum)
- The Marbles - Area 4 - Various white marbles
- The Marbles - Area 5 - Cipollino (marmor carystium)
- The Marbles - Area 6 - Cipollino (marmor carystium)
- The Marbles - Area 7 - Marbles from Via Redipuglia
- The Marbles - Area 8 - Bigio africanato
- The Marbles - Area 9 - Pavonazzetto (marmor phrygium)
- The Marbles - Area 10 - Portasanta (marmor chium)
- The Marbles - Area 11 - Giallo antico (marmor numidicum) and various alabasters
- The Marbles - Area 12 - Egyptian alabaster (lapis onyx)
- The Marbles - Area 13 - Granito troadense (marmor troadensium), bigio di Lesbo (marmor lesbium) and grey granite from the island of Elba
- The Marbles - Area 14 - Breccia dorata, verde antico, fior di pesco, breccia di Sciro, serpentina moschinata, marmo bigio
- The Marbles - Area 15 - Various marbles