The Department of Antiquities, Ministry of Transport, Communications and Works,
announces the completion of the archaeological excavation carried out in September –
October 2024 at the newly identified site of Drouseia-Skloinikia in the northwest sector of
the Akamas Peninsula, under the direction of Dr. Theodora Moutsiou, special scientist of the Archaeological Research Unit of the University of Cyprus, in collaboration with Dr. Christian Reepmeyer, an Archaeologist from the German Archaeological Institute. This year’s campaign aimed at exposing a larger area of the archaeological locality to gain a better understanding of the timing and nature of the site. The research was conducted.

The field research is part of the Modelling Demography and Adaptation at the Initial
Peopling of the Eastern Mediterranean Islandscape (MIGRATE, EXCELLENCE/0421/0050) research program co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund and the Republic of Cyprus through the Research and Innovation Foundation. The excavation also receives funding from the A.G. Leventis Foundation Overseas (Project TOPOS – Exploring the role of coasts in the early prehistory of Cyprus: Integrating archaeological excavations and geospatial technologies at the remote Akamas promontory).

In April 2022, the research team, led by Dr. Moutsiou and Dr. Reepmeyer, conducted a
pedestrian survey in the coastal zone of the Akamas Peninsula using grid/transects for the
systematic collection of surface artefacts, followed by the excavation of a 1×1 m test trench
to determine the nature and potential of the documented surface lithic scatters to preserve
stratified deposits. The results of this preliminary work denoted the area as of ​​high interest
for the preservation of pre-Neolithic remains warranting further investigations.

The 2024 campaign was designed to fulfil the need for a detailed and systematic
investigation of the newly identified site, now named Drouseia Skloinikia. The work was
initiated with the geophysical survey of the site, which covered a total area of 1,720 square
meters and aimed at mapping the subsurface characteristics of the site to inform decisions
on where to position our excavation trenches. The geophysical survey was undertaken by
the Digital Humanities GeoInformatics Lab of the Department of History and Archaeology, University of Cyprus, under the supervision of Prof. Apostolos Sarris. Subsequently, five trenches were drawn and excavated to a maximum depth of 60 cm by the end of the season. The work recorded hundreds of stone artefacts with typo-technological characteristics that provisionally position them at the Terminal Pleistocene – Early Holocene (12-8 ka). A very special find, shown in Figure 1, discovered in situ likely evinces the presence of hunting activities in the region. Several charcoal samples were excavated on site and are being prepared to be sent abroad for radiocarbon dating that is expected to determine the age of the site. Overall, a rich artefact assemblage was collected during the field season encompassing chipped stone, stone containers, beads, shells and bone artefacts. All the excavated material has been georeferenced and the documented material categories are studied by specialists in order to determine their characteristics.

The discovery of this new archaeological site, Drouseia Skloinikia, in such a remote and
secluded part of the island, calls into question the prevailing perception that the Akamas
Peninsula was a culturally marginal area during the early prehistory of Cyprus. Upon completion, the first fieldwork season of the University of Cyprus in Akamas in 2024, adds new data to the study of Cypriot prehistory and, crucially, creates new questions that future research in the region will be called upon to answer. Moreover, the location of the site in a region that is currently undergoing major development works is crucial in informing stakeholders on the ways the works can be conducted sustainably and with respect to the natural and cultural heritage of the region.