|
Ghar Dalam
Cave is a highly important site as it was here that the earliest
evidence of human settlement on Malta, some 7,400 years ago,
was discovered. What makes the site even more fascinating is
that it was in use during World War II, when it served
first as an air raid shelter and later as a fuel storage depot.
The display area consists of two parts: the cave; and the
museum, which exhibits a remarkable wealth of finds from animal
bones to human artefacts. The cave was formed by overlaying
river running at right angles to the present-day cave. It
is some 144 metres deep, but only the first fifty metres are
open to visitors.
The history of the cave and of the Islands can be decoded
from Ghar Dalam’s stratigraphy. The lowermost layers,
more than 500,000 years old, contained the fossil bones of
dwarf elephants, hippopotami, micro-mammals and birds. Above
the pebble layer that follows, is the so-called ‘deer’
layer, dated to around 18,000 years ago. The top layer, or
‘cultural layer’, dates to less than 10,000 years
and holds evidence of the first humans on the Island.
The museum was opened to the public in the early 1930s and
is a piece of history in its own right. It is a fine example
of museum display in the Victorian style. Showcases contain
bones of similar size and origin mounted on boards in uniform
rows. Teeth are placed in jars or stacked in rows. Everything
was designed to impress through its sheer quantity with little
regard given to an exhibit’s scientific or educational
value. The mounted skeletons of a brown bear, baby elephant,
baby hippopotamus, deer, wolf and fox all belong to present-day
animals and are not from the cave.
A didactic display opened to the public in 2002 covers various
aspects of the cave’s formation and charts the animal
and human finds. It also provides information on the forms
of fossil fauna that were present on the Maltese Islands during
the Ice Age.
Ghar Dalam also has a small garden of indigenous and exotic
plants and trees. Specimens include the native, national plant,
Palaeocyanus crassifolius (the Maltese Centaury) and the national
tree Tetraclinis articulata (Sandarac Gum Tree). There are
also two large specimens of the exotic and locally rare Wigandia
caracasana with its thick fleshy leaves and violet blossoms.
The garden acts as home to native lizards and insects such
as the slow moving chameleon (Chamaleo chameleon). In summer
months, the ‘song’ of the male cicada (Cicada
orni), echoes through the gardens and surrounding valley.
Several species of birds such as the Sardinian Warbler (Sylvia
melanocephala) also make their home here.
Ghar Dalam is of particular interest to those studying the
geological, geomorphological, speleological, palaeontological,
archaeological and ecological sciences.
For museum and site opening times, see Visiting.
|