The ship was surveyed and digitally mapped by two remote underwater vehicles Photo: Black Sea MAP/EEF Expeditions |
Recently, the oldest Intact Shipwreck
in the World has been found in the depths of the Black Sea. It is a Greek merchant ship which
met its fate on the Black Sea floor 2,400 years ago. The vessel, measuring 23 m
(75ft.) still has its rudder, rowing benches, and the contents of the hold. The
wreck was discovered more than 80 km (49.1 miles) off the Bulgarian city of
Burgas.
Following three years of highly-advanced technological
mapping of the Black Sea floor, an international team of scientists, led by
experts from the University of Southampton, have confirmed that a shipwreck has
been radiocarbon dated back to 400BC.
The Black Sea Maritime Archaeology Project (MAP) team is
under the leadership of the University of Southampton and Professor Jon Adams,
Professor Lyudmil Vagalinsky of the National Institute of Archaeology with
Museum of the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences and Dr. Kalin Dimitrov of the Centre
of Underwater Archaeology in Sozopol, Bulgaria.
“A ship, surviving intact, from the Classical world, lying in over 2km of
water, is something I would never have believed possible,” said University of
Southampton Professor Jon Adams, the Black Sea MAP’s principal investigator.
“This will change our understanding of shipbuilding and seafaring in the
ancient world.”
Map of Black Sea Photo: Flickr |
The ship lies at a depth of over 2 kilometres where the water
is anoxic (oxygen free), which can preserve organic material for thousands of
years. A small piece of the vessel has been carbon dated and has now been
confirmed as the oldest intact shipwreck known to mankind.
The international team of maritime archaeologists, scientists
and marine surveyors has been on a three-year mission to explore the depths of
the Black Sea to investigate the impact of prehistoric sea-level changes. The
researchers were astonished to find the merchant vessel closely resembled in
design a ship that decorated ancient Greek wine vases.
Lying more than 2,000m below the surface, it is also beyond
the reach of modern divers. The
vessel was one of many trading between the Mediterranean and Greek colonies on
the Black Sea coast. The team used two underwater robotic explorers to map out
a 3-D image of the ship and took a sample to carbon-date its age.
The Anglo-Bulgarian team believe the Black Sea wreck dates back to the Fourth Century BC, perhaps 100 years after the Siren Vase was painted Photo: Werner Forman/Getty Images |
The vessel is similar in style to that depicted by the
so-called Siren Painter on the Siren Vase in the British Museum. Dating back to
around 480 BC, the vase shows Odysseus strapped to the mast as his ship sails
past three mythical sea nymphs whose tune was thought to drive sailors to their
deaths.
The Black Sea has only a narrow connection to the
Mediterranean Sea, so it drains poorly. It is fed by freshwater from the
surrounding land, which floats on top of the saltier water closer to the
bottom. This salty layer is extremely low in oxygen, which keeps wood-eating
microbes away from shipwrecks on the seafloor.
The main goal of the Black Sea MAP is to understand changes
that have occurred since the last ice age, when the sea was much lower. The
area has been a hub of civilization, making the shipwrecks at the bottom important
archaeological sites, revealing who used the sea for commerce and how they
built their vessels.
Like the ancient Irish logboats, these vessels plied the
Black Sea with their cargo, eventually, becoming valuable time capsules of a
long-forgotten marine past.
For further information please see:
https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/ancient-shipwrecks-0010525
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-45951132
https://www.livescience.com/63899-oldest-intact-shipwreck-found.html
http://letterfromballinloughane.blogspot.com/2016/05/irish-logboats.html
For further information please see:
https://www.ancient-origins.net/news-history-archaeology/ancient-shipwrecks-0010525
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-45951132
https://www.livescience.com/63899-oldest-intact-shipwreck-found.html
http://letterfromballinloughane.blogspot.com/2016/05/irish-logboats.html