The site of Dhaskalio Kavos, on the remote Cycladic island of Keros, was
extensively looted in the late 1950s and early 1960s. Investigations
starting in1963 then revealed large quantities of fractured marble
bowls, broken marble figures and smashed pottery of the Early Cycladic
period from around 2500 BC. This report of the subsequent survey and
rescue excavations of 1987-88 reveals the extraordinary richness of the
site, now confirmed as one of the most prolific in Èlite goods of the
entire Aegean early bronze age. Was it an unprecedentedly rich Early
Cycladic cemetery, recently wrecked by looters? Or was the damage
deliberately produced during early bronze age times in some procedure of
ritual breakage and ceremonial deposition? Here the survey of the site
and the rescue excavations undertaken within the looted area are
documented in detail, with a full account of the finds. Alternative
explanations for this extraordinary deposit are explored. What has been
termed 'the Keros Enigma', in the light of the finds at the site, can
now be reconsidered with the full documentation which this volume
offers.