News stories about the Scheme in the Guardian2026-06-06T01:00:31+01:00Zend_Feed_Writerhttps://marinefinds.org.ukThe Guardian API and Daniel Pettmas@wessexarch.co.ukhttps://marinefinds.org.ukMarine archaeologist unearths evidence suggesting biblical king’s riches were based on voyages he funded with Phoenician allies]]>2021-04-25T09:00:00+00:002021-04-25T09:00:00+00:00https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/apr/25/was-king-solomon-the-ancient-worlds-first-shipping-magnateDalya Albergef the magnificent palace and temple he is supposed to have built in
Jerusalem 3,000 years ago, the Israelite king has sunk into the
realm of myth. Now British marine archaeologist Dr Sean Kingsley
has amassed evidence showing that Solomon was not only a
flesh-and-blood monarch but also the world’s first shipping
magnate, who funded voyages carried out by his Phoenician allies in
“history’s first special relationship”. Over 10 years, Kingsley has
carried out a maritime audit of “the Solomon question”. By
extending the search beyond the Holy Land, across the Mediterranean
to Spain and Sardinia, he found that archaeological evidence
supports biblical descriptions of a partnership between Solomon,
who “excelled all the kings of the earth in riches and in wisdom”,
and the Phoenician king Hiram, who “supplied Solomon with cedar
timber and gold, as much as he desired”. Kingsley told the
Observer: “I’ve spread a very wide net. That kind of maritime study
has never been done before.” He said: “For 100 years,
archaeologists have scrutinised Jerusalem’s holy soils, the most
excavated city in the world. Nothing definitive fits the book of
Kings’ and Chronicles’ epic accounts of Solomon’s palace and
temple. By exploring traces of ports, warehouses, industry and
shipwrecks, new evidence shakes up the quest for truth.” He
explored Andalusian port towns from Mezquitilla to Málaga and found
that the archaeological evidence reveals “a Phoenician coast”. He
visited the site of the great mine of the ancient world, Rio Tinto
– 70km inland from Huelva – which produced gold, silver, lead,
copper and zinc – and where, crucially, he realised that old maps
and historical accounts referred to a particular spot as Cerro
Solomon or Solomon’s Hill. One 17th-century account notes that
Solomon’s Hill was previously called Solomon’s Castle, and another
describes people being “sent there by King Solomon for gold and
silver”. At the site, archaeologists have found ancient mining
tools, such as granite pestles and stone mortars used to crush
minerals, and remnants of lead slag that held a high proportion of
silver. Kingsley said that lead isotope analysis has shown that
silver hoards excavated in Israel originally came from Iberia.
Recent digs in nearby Huelva have found evidence of the Israelites
and Phoenicians, including elephant tusks, merchants’ shekel
weights and pottery. The Near Eastern link can be dated as far back
as 930BC, the end of Solomon’s reign, and Kingsley has concluded
that Huelva is “the best fit for the capital of the biblical
Tarshish”, the ancient source of imported metals, which
archaeologists have “signposted wildly”, everywhere from southern
Israel to the Red Sea, Ethiopia to Tunisia. He was struck by texts
and ruins that support a “far more conclusive candidate” in this
area of the southern Iberian Peninsula, which was known in
antiquity as Tartessos, a Greek derivation of Tarshish. A
Phoenician script on a ninth-century BC stele found in Sardinia
refers to the land of Tarshish, also proving its historical
reality. Kingsley, who has explored more than 350 shipwrecks in the
past 30 years, will publish his research in the forthcoming spring
issue of Wreckwatch magazine, the free journal for maritime
archaeology, which he also edits. Solomon is believed to have built
the First Temple of Jerusalem on the Temple Mount. Kingsley writes
that everything historians know about it comes from the Bible,
including details such as its inner sanctum lined with pure gold:
“Building cities, palaces and a flagship temple didn’t come cheap.
Long-distance voyages to the lands of Ophir and Tarshish brought a
river of gold, silver, precious stones and marble to the royal
court. “Neither Israel nor Lebanon could tap into local gold and
silver resources. The biblical entrepreneurs were forced to look to
the horizon. The land of Tarshish was a vital source for Solomon’s
silver. As the Book of Ezekiel recorded: ‘Tarshish did business
with you because of your great wealth of goods.’” Kingsley added:
“What turned up in southern Spain is undeniable. Phoenician
signature finds, richly strewn from Rio Tinto to Málaga, leave no
doubt that Near Eastern ships voyaged to what must have seemed the
far side of the moon by 900BC. “When I spotted in ancient accounts
the name of the hill where silver was mined at Rio Tinto –
Solomon’s Hill – I was stunned. Biblical history, archaeology and
myth merged to reveal the long-sought land of Tarshish celebrated
in the Old Testament. “It looks like Solomon was wise in his
maritime planning. He bankrolled the voyages from Jerusalem and let
salty Phoenician sailors take all the risks at sea.”Scientists hope that ice will give up more clues to the fate of the 1845 Arctic expedition to find the Northwest Passage]]>2021-03-14T07:00:00+00:002021-03-14T07:00:00+00:00https://www.theguardian.com/science/2021/mar/14/what-happened-on-hms-terror-divers-plan-return-to-franklin-wrecksRobin McKie and Vanessa Thorpeion for the past century and a half. Now Canadian researchers are
facing a crucial decision on whether to relaunch attempts to find
new clues about the ships’ fate. graphic Over the past few years
they have already recovered hundreds of artefacts – from shoes and
ceramic dishes to a ship’s bell and a lieutenant’s epaulette – from
the wrecks of the two ships after they sank in the Canadian Arctic.
But last year marine archaeologists had to abandon dives to the
wrecks because of the Covid pandemic and they are unsure if they
will be able return to the ships this summer when the sea ice
retreats sufficiently to allow access to the wrecks near King
William Island. Franklin set off from Greenhithe in Kent in 1845 to
find the Northwest Passage, a polar route to the Far East. His
ships were fitted with steam-driven propellers to help them
manoeuvre in pack ice and their holds were filled with a three-year
supply of tinned provisions. It was one of the best-equipped marine
expeditions of its day. So what befell the ships? From their first
disappearance the mystery of the Erebus and the Terror has gripped
the public’s imagination. As Andrew Lambert says in his biography,
Franklin, Tragic Hero of Polar Navigation: “At the heart of every
story about the Arctic stands John Franklin.” Charles Dickens,
Wilkie Collins, Jules Verne and Mark Twain all wrote about the
expedition. However, the screening of The Terror on BBC Two this
month has regalvanised interest across Britain and taken viewers on
board the two ill-fated ships to see what life would have been like
for the crew who had to endure temperatures of minus 50C throughout
several Arctic winters. With both vessels trapped in pack ice, this
grim tale – based on Dan Simmons’s bestselling 2007 novel – charts
not just a journey across the icy Arctic wastes but also traces the
conflicts that flared between those in charge. Crucially, the
script also pays due attention to the culture of the local Inuit
people, something that was often disregarded by Royal Navy
adventurers who later tried to find Franklin and his men. Francis
Crozier who commanded HMS Terror, is played by Jared Harris
(recently in Chernobyl) as the more cautious seaman who attempts –
despite a debilitating alcohol dependency – to persuade Franklin
(played by Ciarán Hinds) to abandon his mission as being too
dangerous. Other key characters include the ambitious first officer
of Erebus, James Fitzjames (Tobias Menzies), and Henry Goodsir,
known as Harry, a kindly Scottish surgeon and naturalist (Paul
Ready). Much of the drama follows Simmons’s fictional conjecture
that the division in the crews’ loyalties contributed to the
eventual failure of the expedition, although supernatural elements
also pepper the plot. The drama has been widely praised for its
production and convincing depictions of the Arctic, which were
recreated digitally using the same special effects that series
producer Ridley Scott used in his film The Martian. However, for
all its televisual sophistication, The Terror does not answer the
key question: what really doomed the Franklin expedition? Many
theories have been suggested: the crews were struck down by
botulism; they suffered lead poisoning from the poorly sealed tins
of food; or were badly led by Franklin, who let his ships sail on a
route frequently blocked by ice even in summer. What is known is
that surviving crewmen eventually abandoned both vessels and headed
south on foot across King William Island. Cut marks on skeletons
make it clear some indulged in cannibalism before perishing. Just
why the expedition went so badly wrong is unclear but our
understanding would be transformed by paperwork, says Claire
Warrior, a senior curator at the National Maritime Museum in London
– and that is the real hope of the dives that will eventually start
again this year or next. “If papers on the Erebus and Terror had
been kept in sealed boxes or drawers, they may have survived
immersion in the very cold, dark waters,” she said. “Diaries or
written commands would make the most meaningful difference in terms
of understanding what happened. That is what we are hoping will be
found.” In the end, the bodies of more than 30 crewmen from the
ships were found on King William Island. Most are still buried
there, although two were returned to Britain. Lieutenant John
Irving was identified from personal effects and was buried in Dean
cemetery, Edinburgh, in 1881. The second was initially identified
as being that of Henry Le Vesconte, a lieutenant on Erebus, before
it was interred beneath the Franklin memorial at Greenwich Old
Royal Naval College in London. However, in 2009, the memorial was
moved, and a facial reconstruction from the remains was carried out
– and produced a close match with a surviving daguerreotype of
Henry Goodsir. For good measure, isotope analysis of tooth enamel
suggested an upbringing in eastern Scotland (Goodsir was raised in
Fife) but not with Le Vesconte’s upbringing in southwest England.
The remains are now attributed to Goodsir. “Obviously we would like
clues in future years to what happened to all these men but on
their own, the items that have been recovered have transformed our
appreciation of how they lived,” added Warrior. “Bits of accordion,
pipes and books have been found. These are touchstones to those
lives and they have incredible poignancy.”BBC documentary shows fragile sunken vessel in which enslaved Africans died is being destroyed by trawlers]]>2020-10-11T07:00:15+00:002020-10-11T07:00:15+00:00https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/oct/11/wreck-of-the-worlds-oldest-slave-ship-at-risk-of-destructionDalya Albergen the seabed about 40 miles south of Land’s End. It is being
“pounded into oblivion” by “bulldozers of the deep”, claimed a
leading British marine archaeologist. This was a trade that saw
more than 12 million Africans taken across the Atlantic in 45,000
voyages over 400 years. Many did not survive the journey. Any
submerged evidence offering insights into untold horrors that the
slaves had endured on board such ships will be lost for ever,
warned Dr Sean Kingsley. He has been alarmed by underwater footage
filmed for a new documentary series about the transatlantic slave
trade. It reveals extensive damage to a wreck that was once “a
beast of a ship”, carrying 48 cannon, perhaps 600 tons in capacity
and manned by a crew of 70. He said: “Fifty years ago, this wreck
must have been a thing of wonder. Today, what’s left is tragic.
Trawlers dragging nets for fish and scallops have bulldozed
everything. Cannon have been dragged 300 metres away. If trawlers
can throw two-ton guns around like matchsticks, then the wooden
hull and small finds have no chance. Archaeologists call deep-sea
wrecks time-capsules. This wreck looks like a war zone. “Wrecks
should be used as museums for memory and education. In this case,
the future’s chances of bearing witness to the horrors of the slave
trade are fading fast. It’s a double tragedy.” The footage was
filmed for Enslaved, a documentary about the transatlantic trade,
which begins tonight on BBC Two. Kingsley, who has explored more
than 350 shipwrecks, is adviser to the documentary. As the founding
editor of Wreckwatch, the world’s only magazine dedicated to the
sunken past, he will publish the new evidence in the next issue.
The wreck lies 110 metres down, and the Enslaved team became the
first to visit it. The team included Diving With a Purpose, a group
dedicated to the maritime history of African Americans. Kramer
Wimberley, its lead instructor, said: “The story of the slave trade
is world history. England was involved in it, Portugal, the French
and Dutch were involved in it, the Africans were involved in it.
It’s a world shame. If that wreck’s the final resting place of some
of my ancestors, then it’s a burial ground. But it’s also a crime
scene because they were taken. There was an injustice that took
place, and no one has ever been brought to account. I want justice
for those people. Archaeology can make sure we never forget.” map
of shipwreck's location The ship was among more than 500 despatched
by the Royal African Company to West Africa between 1672 and 1713.
In conducting research for Enslaved, Kingsley studied 279 of the
company’s sea voyages between 1672 and 1690. He found that, of
65,411 Africans trafficked to the Caribbean, 14,668 died at sea,
having been chained in cramped hulls: “Most of the Africans were
seized in Whydah in Benin, Calabar in Nigeria, Gambia and the Gold
Coast in modern Ghana. The enslaved ended up sold to plantation
owners in Barbados, Jamaica, Nevis, Virginia and Antigua.” Set up
by the royal Stuart family, the company’s governor was James, Duke
of York and future king of England, and its deputy governor was
Edward Colston, whose statue was recently toppled in Bristol.
Expressing sympathy for fishermen working under harsh conditions,
Kingsley criticised the inability to protect rare wrecks that lie
outside UK territorial waters as “a serious heritage failure”.Underwater haul of Tiwanaku ceremonial relics is unprecedented, say academics]]>2019-04-01T19:00:00+00:002019-04-01T19:00:00+00:00https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/apr/01/archaeologists-discover-exceptional-site-at-lake-titicacaIan Sample Science editories in which the elite of the region’s Tiwanaku state boated out to
the reef and sacrificed young llamas, seemingly decorated for
death, and made offerings of gold and exquisite stone miniatures to
a ray-faced deity, as incense billowed from pottery pumas. Tiwanaku
state arose in the Lake Titicaca basin, around the border of modern
Bolivia and Peru, between the 5th and 12th centuries AD, and went
on to become one of the largest and most influential in the Andes.
Formed by a natural fault that divides the Andes into two mountain
ranges, the basin is a unique ecosystem with an “inland sea” set
3,800m above sea level. At the time of the Spanish conquest, the
basin was home to an estimated 1 million people. Lake Titicaca map
Marine archaeologists decided to explore the Khoa reef after
amateur divers found a number of ancient items at the site. The
reef is submerged in more than 5m of water about 10km off the
northwestern tip of the Island of the Sun, a central feature of
Lake Titicaca. The researchers excavated a trove of artefacts
including a lapis lazuli puma figurine and other miniature stone
animals, ceramic puma incense burners and gold ornaments including
engraved sheets, a medallion, and an L-shaped piece marked with
puma and condor silhouettes. Perforated gold leaves still attached
to fragments of leather may have been used to make ear tassels and
other regalia to dress young llamas killed in the ancient
ceremonies, the researchers believe. Taken together, the items
reveal how the lavish ceremonies displayed and disposed of the most
prestigious materials that money could buy in the ancient Andean
empire. Besides the gold and the carved and polished stones were
spiny oyster shells from the warm waters off the Ecuadorian coast,
nearly 2,000km away. They could only have been obtained through
trade. “What is great about these artefacts is that, beyond their
beauty and the quality of manufacture, they were discovered in an
undisturbed context,” said Christophe Delaere, a marine
archaeologist at the University of Oxford and the Free University
of Brussels. “This is one of the advantages of underwater heritage.
Lake Titicaca protects its ancient material culture from time and
man. Never before have so many artefacts of this quality been
discovered. The history that these objects tell us is exceptional.”
Found alongside the artefacts were llama bones and the remnants of
burnt fish, the latter of which are thought to have been eaten
during the ceremonies. Carbon dating of charcoal and bones at the
site found that the offerings were made throughout the 8th and 10th
centuries AD, according to a report in the Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences. The ancient offerings are not the
first riches to be recovered from Lake Titicaca, but the
exceptional quality and abundance of the items puts the reef at the
heart of the Tiwanaku people’s beliefs and ritual landscape. One of
the major questions surrounding Tiwanaku state is how it expanded
so effectively across the Titicaca basin in the first millennium.
Charles Stanish, an anthropologist on the team from the University
of South Florida, said that pilgrimages leading up to elaborate
ceremonies were a crucial part of the state structure. Through
ritual, religion and “supernatural punishers”, the state encouraged
cooperation and deterred freeloaders and other rebels. “What we’ve
discovered in the Titicaca basin are pilgrimages and ritual
processions and these are part of the state apparatus. As you
participate in them you are reinforcing the power of the state,”
Stanish said. “Combined with what’s been found off other islands in
the 1990s, the discovery of these items on the reef shows us there
was probably a series of pilgrimages or precessions around the lake
and I find that to be extremely exciting.” More than a dozen
Tiwanaku sites have been found on the Island of the Sun. One, near
the north-west shore, is a puma-shaped ceremonial complex. But from
Khoa reef, those taking part in a water ceremony would have a
panoramic view of the lake and the spectacular surrounding
mountains. “It is not surprising that the Tiwanaku elite
appropriated this space for costly and highly charged ceremonies,”
the authors write. “Ritual and religion were profoundly important
in ancient states. It is not some new age-y thing,” said Stanish.
“Ritual and religion structured people’s lives, it structured the
economy and the whole of society. This is how these people were
able to create spectacular ways to get along and have a very
successful society.”Weather rather than pirates caused majority of sinkings, says culture ministry team]]>2019-03-01T11:00:54+00:002019-03-01T11:00:54+00:00https://www.theguardian.com/science/2019/mar/01/spain-logs-shipwrecks-maritime-past-weather-piratesSam Jones in Madridis now Haiti. Over the following four centuries, as Spain’s
maritime empire swelled, peaked and collapsed, the waves on which
it was built devoured hundreds of ships and thousands of people,
swallowing gold, silver and emeralds and scattering spices, mercury
and cochineal to the currents. Today, three researchers working for
the Spanish culture ministry have finished the initial phase of a
project to catalogue the wrecks of the ships that forged and
maintained the empire. Led by an archaeologist, Carlos León, the
team has logged 681 shipwrecks off Cuba, Panama, the Dominican
Republic, Haiti, Bermuda, the Bahamas and the US Atlantic coast.
Its inventory runs from the sinking of the Santa María to July
1898, when the Spanish destroyer Plutón was hit by a US boat off
Cuba, heralding the end of the Spanish-American war and the
twilight of Spain’s imperial age. After spending five years
scouring archives in Seville and Madrid, León, his fellow
archaeologist Beatriz Domingo and the naval historian Genoveva
Enríquez have put together a list aimed at safeguarding the future
and shedding light on the past. “We had two fundamental
objectives,” says León. “One was to come up with a tool that can be
used for identifying and protecting wreck sites – especially in
areas where there’s a high concentration of sunken ships. Ships are
a bit like aeroplanes – they usually go down on take-off or landing
Carlos León, archaeologist “The other was to recover a bit of
history that’s been very much forgotten. The most famous ships have
been investigated, but there’s a huge number about which we know
absolutely nothing. We don’t know how they sank, or how deep.” The
information gathered would help the team to find out what
navigation was like at the time, he said. The team’s research will
thrill historians and cartographers, but is unlikely to delight
those who harbour romantic notions about doubloons, parrots and
Jolly Rogers. It found that 91.2% of ships were sunk by severe
weather – mainly tropical storms and hurricanes – 4.3% ran on to
reefs or had other navigational problems, and 1.4% were lost to
naval engagements with British, Dutch or US ships. A mere 0.8% were
sunk in pirate attacks. map Archaeologists have located the remains
of fewer than a quarter of the 681 vessels on the inventory to
date. León, Domingo and Enríquez were surprised to come across 12
areas with particularly high concentrations of wrecks in Panama,
the Dominican Republic and the Florida Keys. Instead of the
expected two or three wrecks per bay, they discovered as many as
18. “Some of these areas, like Damas bay in Panama, are very open,”
says León. “There were huge annual trade festivals there from the
16th century to the mid-17th and that attracted a massive amount of
maritime traffic. It’s not a very protected area and so when a
storm came in, the ships sank.” Or, to put it in more modern terms:
“It was like a motorway. It’s not very deep there, either. And
ships are a bit like aeroplanes. They usually go down on take-off
or landing.” Treasure hunters tend to be more interested in ships
that came to grief on their way back from the Americas, but León
and his colleagues say the ill-fated outward-bound vessels are just
as compelling. “The cargo they carried speaks of a massive amount
of trade,” says the archaeologist. “But it’s not just about
products and trade. These ships were also carrying ideas. We were
surprised to find a lot of boats loaded with religious objects –
relics, decorations and even stones to build churches.” Their
findings, however, go beyond cutlasses and crucifixes, and help to
explain how Spain succeeded in enriching itself for centuries. As
well as the “tonnes and tonnes” of mercury sent to the new world to
be used in extracting gold and silver from the mines that fed the
empire, “we found boats that were carrying clothes for slaves”.
Others carried weapons to be used in putting down local rebellions.
The researchers now plan to transfer the paper inventory to a
database that the Spanish government can share with countries with
colonial shipwrecks in their waters. León hopes the information his
team has gathered will give those countries what they need to
safeguard their maritime heritage against unscrupulous treasure
hunters who all too often use salvage permits as a cover for more
profitable explorations. “We have to be very careful about the
details and positions of some of the ships,” he says. “But the
ministry works with countries that have ratified the 2001 Unesco
convention [on the protection of the underwater cultural heritage],
so they should be countries that aren’t going to use this
information to make deals with treasure-hunting firms.” Anyway, he
adds, the big treasure-hunting outfits will not be interested in
most of the wrecks on the inventory. “It’s true that the big
treasure-hunting firms have spent years doing what we’ve been
doing, but only when it comes to the ships that carried huge
treasure loads. I don’t think we’d be helping them out much, to be
honest.” The three researchers are now preparing for another deep
dive, into the archives and libraries. The Spanish empire was,
after all, a very, very large one. “We’ve still got many more areas
to go,” says León. “Next year, I’d like to work on Mexico,
Colombia, Puerto Rico and Costa Rica so as to kind of finish up the
Caribbean area. After that’s it’s on to the Pacific.”Arm points to existence of at least seven statues from Greek shipwreck, already the source of most extensive and exciting ancient cargo ever found ]]>2017-10-04T11:00:56+00:002017-10-04T11:00:56+00:00https://www.theguardian.com/science/2017/oct/04/antikythera-shipwreck-yields-new-treasures-and-hints-of-priceless-classical-statuesIan Sample Science editorlf a metre of sediment on the boulder-strewn slope where the ship
and its cargo now rest. The huge vessel, perhaps 50m from bow to
stern, was sailing from Asia Minor to Rome in 1BC when it foundered
near the tiny island between Crete and the Peloponnese. The project
team, from the Greek Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities and Lund
University in Sweden, discovered the buried arm with a bespoke
underwater metal detector which has revealed the presence of other
large metal objects nearby under the seabed. “There should be at
least seven statues,” Alexandros Sotiriou, a Greek technical diver
on the team told the Guardian. The operation is overseen by Ageliki
Simosi, director of the Greek Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities,
which is responsible for all underwater archaeology in Greece.
“What we’re finding is these sculptures are in among and under the
boulders,” said Brendan Foley, co-director of the excavations team
at Lund University. “We think it means a minimum of seven, and
potentially nine, bronze sculptures still waiting for us down
there.” The boulders that overlie the metal objects weigh several
tonnes and may have tumbled onto the wreck during a massive
earthquake that shook Antikythera and surrounding islands in the
4th century AD. The bronze arm, probably from a statue of a male,
is the highlight of the team’s 2017 excavation season. Among other
objects the divers recovered are a patterned slab of red marble the
size of a tea tray, a silver tankard, sections of joined wood from
the ship’s frame, and a human bone. Last year, the team found the
skull, teeth, ribs and other bones of an individual who perished on
the wreck. They have since extracted DNA from the skull and from it
learned the individual’s sex and where they came from. Until those
results are published, the person is known as Pamphilos after
divers found the name, meaning “friend of all”, carved on a buried
cup that had been decorated with an erotic scene. The Antikythera
wreck first came to light in 1900 when Greek sponge divers happened
on the scene in 50 metres of water. Archaeologists have since
pulled up spectacular bronze and marble statues, ornate glass and
pottery, stunning pieces of jewellery, and a remarkable geared
device – the Antikythera mechanism – which modelled the motion of
the heavens. During the 2017 excavations, divers recovered a bronze
disc that may be a missing part of the ancient device. But it is
the statues that made the wreck famous. In the 1900s,
archaeologists working at the site surfaced pieces of a beautiful
Hellenistic bronze, named the Antikythera Youth. The statue now
stands in the National Archaeological Museum in Athens alongside an
impressive bronze head named the Antikythera philosopher, also
hauled from the wreck. Both date to the 4th century BC, raising the
question of how they came to be aboard the ill-fated ship 300 years
later. Jens Daehner, associate curator of antiquities at the J Paul
Getty Museum in Los Angeles, said the Antikythera wreck had already
yielded significant bronze statues. “The chance to recover another
group of lifesize statues associated with the wreck is
extraordinary, because bronzes are usually encountered randomly
under the sea, picked up by fishing nets or chanced upon by
divers,” he said. “Those finds are not excavated like at
Antikythera, where archaeologists can and do document the entire
context, which provides all the sorts of very valuable data as to
when the sculptures were transported and why they were on the ship:
for trade, as booty, or as scrap metal to be recycled.” The bronze
recycling industry was huge in classical times and later in the
medieval period, leading to the destruction of countless statues
and other artefacts that would be priceless today. For this reason,
many of the finest specimens of bronze statues that survive were
once lost at sea. “Ancient bronze sculpture in general is rare due
to the metal having been recycled in antiquity and later. We think
of the ones from the sea as those that got away,” said Daehner.
“Any chance to recover more Greek sculptures in any medium, but
particularly in bronze, should not be missed.” To recover the
statues will take a massive effort. The divers must first remove
boulders that are in their way, either by hauling them up, or by
drilling holes in the rocks and filling them with grout that
expands to fracture the stone. Another option is to crack the
boulders open with small shaped charges that technical divers use
to rescue people trapped when undersea caves collapse. But even if
the statues can be lifted from the sea, they will be broken and
need costly and time-consuming conservation and reconstruction.
Statues are not the only objects the excavators hope to find. The
latest excavations uncovered a lump of material bearing a bronze
disc that matches the size of geared wheels found in the
Antikythera mechanism. Wound by a handle, the device showed the
movement of the sun, moon and planets in the sky, but not all of
the machine was recovered. “The disc looks very exciting indeed,”
said Andrew Ramsey, a CT specialist at Nikon Metrology in Tring,
who used CT scans to read inscriptions on the original pieces of
the mechanism. But the disc may be something entirely different.
Preliminary x-ray images reveal no teeth, but an image of a bull,
suggesting the disc is not a cog but a decorative item. Mike
Edmunds, emeritus professor of astrophysics at Cardiff University
and a member of the Antikythera Mechanism Research Project, said
the findings are impressive. “They are getting very good at
detecting bronze items which raises the possibility that they may
be able to find either the missing planetary gearing from the
Antikythera mechanism, which we know is there from the analysis of
the inscriptions on the mechanism, or a new piece of mechanism, or
another mechanism that was being transported, and that would be
very exciting.” The team will return to the wreck in the spring,
optimistic that they may pull up fresh treasures from the wreck.
“It’s not going to be just the bronze sculptures,” said Foley.
“We’re down in the hold of the ship now, so all the other things
that would have been carried should be down there as well. Every
day is going to be like opening Tut’s tomb.”Robotic submarines and ‘internet of underwater things’ to transform hunt for sunken cities and ancient shipwrecks]]>2016-12-29T23:00:23+00:002016-12-29T23:00:23+00:00https://www.theguardian.com/science/2016/dec/29/new-technologies-bring-marine-archaeology-treasures-to-lightIan Sample Science editorones that stood in a semicircular embrace around a spring where
people came to drink. Then one day, life ended. The village that
once sat on the Mediterranean coast now lies 10 metres beneath the
waves off Israel’s shore. It was inundated when sea levels rose at
the end of the last ice age. But Atlit-Yam was destroyed before
then, and swiftly, perhaps by a tsunami. Buried under sand at the
bottom of the sea, it now ranks as the largest and best preserved
prehistoric settlement ever found on the seafloor. Human skeletons
still lie there in graves, undisturbed. Map For marine
archaeologists, Atlit-Yam is a trove from the Neolithic world.
Research on the buildings, tools and the remains of past lives has
revealed how the bustling village once worked. “It looks as though
it was inhabited until the day it was submerged,” said Benedetto
Allotta, head of industrial engineering at the University of
Florence. But for all the secrets the site has shared, it is only
one window into a lost world. For a fuller picture, researchers
need more sunken settlements. The hard part is finding them. In
January, work will start on a new project to transform the search
for sunken cities, ancient shipwrecks and other subsea curiosities.
Led by Italian researchers, Archeosub will build a new generation
of robotic submarines, or autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs),
for marine archaeologists. “You can find plenty of human
settlements not far from the coast,” Allotta said. “In the
Mediterranean there will be a lot more Atlit-Yams waiting to be
explored and studied.” The goal of Archeosub is to put
sophisticated AUVs in the hands of cash-strapped researchers. That,
in part, means turning the costly, heavy technology of the military
and oil industries into far cheaper and lighter robots. They must
be affordable for archaeological organisations and light enough to
launch by hand from a small boat, or even the shore, rather than
from a winch on a large research vessel. Slashing the cost and
weight is only the start. The team behind Archeosub has begun to
make the AUVs smarter too. When thrown overboard, the submarines
can become part of an “internet of underwater things” which brings
the power of wifi to the deep. Once hooked up, the AUVs can talk to
each other and, for example, work out the most efficient way to
survey a site, or find particular objects on the seabed. Field
tests show the approach can work. When cargo ships near Porto in
northern Portugal lose containers overboard, AUVs can be deployed
to find the missing goods. And in a trial last year, Allotta’s
group sent three AUVs to search for wrecks at Marzamemi, off the
Sicilian coast. The site is the final resting place of a Roman
ship, known as the “church wreck”, which sank while ferrying
pre-formed parts of marble and breccia for an early Christian
church in the 6th century AD. “We used the AUVs to pass through and
look for new ruins,” Allotta said. “We could do a reconstruction of
the area, where old Roman ships sank while bringing marble columns
to Italy,” he said. Creating an internet beneath the waves is no
breeze. Slip under the surface and the electromagnetic waves used
in wifi networks travel only centimetres. Instead, a more complex
mix of technologies is called for. Acoustic waves, which are
affected by depth, temperature, salinity and surface wind, are used
to communicate over long distances underwater. At close range, AUVs
can share data over light beams. But more creative solutions are
also envisaged, where an AUV working on the seabed offloads data to
a second which then surfaces and beams it home by satellite link.
Work is underway on AUVs that can beam pictures from the seabed
over acoustic waves, and dock with others that charge them up.
Surface buoys that receive GPS signals tell the AUVs where they
are. “If you want to build an internet of underwater things, you
cannot use the technology we have developed for the terrestrial
world,” said Chiara Petrioli, a computer engineer who leads the
work under the Sunrise project at Rome University. “You have to be
smarter.” David Lane, a professor of autonomous engineering at
Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, has created a marine version
of Dropbox for the underwater internet of things. It allows AUVs to
share information from seafloor scans and other data. So if an AUV
on a first pass survey spies an intriguing object on the seabed, it
can share the coordinates with a nearby AUV that carries better
cameras and sonar, and arrange for a closer inspection once it has
left the area. “The use of these vehicles has huge potential for
marine archaeology,” Lane said. “There’s a lot of history wrapped
up in what’s lying on the seabed.” Related: DNA from the deep?
Antikythera shipwreck yields ancient human bones One site where
Allotta plans to deploy the new AUVs is the Gulf of Baratti off the
coast of Tuscany. In 1974, a remarkable shipwreck was discovered
there in 18 metres of water. More than a merchant ship, the
2000-year-old vessel was a travelling medical emporium. More than
100 wooden vials were found on board, along with other ancient
medical supplies, including tin containers of tablets that may have
been dissolved and used as eyewash. Other Roman ships went down in
the waters, shedding cargoes of olive oil and wine held in huge
terracotta pots called dolia. Often it is only the dolia that
remain, the wooden ships lost, or at least buried, under silt.
Allotta hopes to have the first test results from the Archeosub
project in the summer. “Right now, we don’t have the right
technology to give to archaeologists,” he said. “But we are close.”