Using Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) for detecting a crypt beneath a paved church floor

Authors

  • Marjana Zajc
  • Alojzij Grebenc

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5474/geologija.2023.013

Abstract

After the discovery of an archive document regarding an underground crypt beneath the floors of the Church of St. Margaret (Sv. Marjeta) in Dol pri Ljubljani, Slovenia, further research was carried out to confirm its presence. An area filled with construction waste was discovered during a recent small-scale renovation of the church floor. This finding suggested the potential underground chamber may have been partly filled in during one of the previous restorations. A non-invasive GPR study was carried out along eight profiles inside the church to prove the existence of an underground crypt. Results show the presence of an air-filled chamber, confirmed later by a hole drilled in the floor. Additional findings in the church archive and pictures taken by a camera, lowered through a drilled hole, revealed three previously unknown caskets in the crypt. According to the archives, two of them belong to Baron Wolf Daniel Erberg and his wife who died in 1783 and 1774, respectively.

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How to Cite

Zajc, M., & Grebenc, A. (2023). Using Ground Penetrating Radar (GPR) for detecting a crypt beneath a paved church floor. Geologija, 66(2), 275–283. https://doi.org/10.5474/geologija.2023.013

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Articles