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| Malta,
and the smaller islands of Gozo and Comino,
are about as close as you can get to the mid-point
of the Mediterranean, being about 1,800 kilometres
from the Straits of Gibraltar and 1,900 from
Beirut. It is about a quarter of the way between
Europe and Africa and is in a position to
control traffic sailing through or across
the Straits of Sicily. The strategic importance
of the archipelago has been considerable in
the past, particularly during the sixteenth
century, when the expansion of the Ottoman
empire threatened the very existence of western
Europe, and the Napoleonic Age when the British
Royal Navy established the Grand Harbour as
one of its principal bases in the Mediterranean.
Malta was the key to Allied success in the
North African campaign of the Second World
War when its inhabitants were awarded the
George Cross for their courage in the face
of prolonged and intensive Axis bombing. In
prehistoric times, however, Malta was decidedly
off the beaten track, although far from completely
disconnected with the world around it. |
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The
islands are small. Malta is only about 30 kilometres
long and about half that distance across while
Gozo is only about one-third the size. Today they
are pretty much bare of trees—apart from
the old hunting park of the Knights of Saint John—but,
prior to the Bronze Age when there was a high
demand for fuel to smelt metal, the landscape
was forested with pine and oak. They were formed
out of layers deposited during the Miocene, millions
of years ago. The lowest are composed of a very
durable Coralline limestone, formed from ancient
coral, which is difficult to carve but which can
be split into building slabs with relative ease.
Above that is a layer of much softer Globigerina
limestone, formed from the skeletons of minute
marine creatures which had settled on the seabed.
Next is a layer of blue clay, useful for pottery,
then a thin layer of Greensand and finally another
layer of Coralline. Faulting is a major feature
of the landscape, creating a series of alternating
ridges and valleys in the north of the island.
The impervious layer of clay underlying the fractured
limestone means that the islands are well-provided
with springs. This is of vital importance as the
islands receive an average rainfall of only 550mm
per year and that falls mainly in the winter months.
The soil is reasonably good for farming but, since
the disappearance of the trees, has been prone
to serious erosion. The quality of the stone was
excellent for architectural purposes—hard
Corallines for the more exposed parts and soft,
beautifully coloured Globigerinas for the interiors.
Apart from building stone, the islands are generally
short of natural resources—good quality
flint; obsidian and metal ores are lacking. The
islands probably never had much in the way of
timber and what little there was had disappeared
by the end of the Neolithic.
Population estimates are notoriously iffy, but
a ‘carrying capacity’ of about 10,000
people would seem about right for the islands
in the prehistoric period.
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