The Trusty Servant Nov 2016 No.122 | Page 9

NO.122 T H E T R U S T Y S E RVA N T soils, land snails and pollen, as well as studies of the remains of humans who lived in the landscapes, are answering questions about the fragility, sustainability and ultimately the collapse of the society that created the impressive monuments. In fact, the challenges of the small island world of Malta in prehistory, a mere 318km2 in size, can be compared to the challenges faced by our world today. On ancient Malta, we can recognise many of the salient issues of the modern earth in the deforestation and erosion, the physical toll on human bodies, the restricted resources and the tentative responses by the human populations of that distant time. However, whereas the prehistoric inhabitants of Malta had the maritime technology to escape their island home, the modern inhabitants of our world have yet to develop the space technology to leave our globe on a sufficient scale that would ensure long-term survival. A view down onto the Roman villa excavated by Ashby in Ramla Bay, Gozo (Malta), c. 1910. The current FRAGSUS project (PI Caroline Malone Queen’s Belfast), supported by the European Research Council, can be explored on a number of websites listed here: General view of the Santa Verna excavation, 1911. Our work team adopted the same hats as the workers of the early 1900s. 9 www.arch.cam.ac.uk/research/projects/fragsus. The photos are reproduced by kind permission of the British School at Rome and I would like to thank Alessandra Giovenco for the preparation of the images. ■ The main trench excavated by Ashby, 1911, and identified in the 2015 excavation.