Classical Archaeology News

Aug 07 2012
Roman-era boat found off Italy coast ‘almost intact’

Divers say they have discovered a ship off the coast of Italy which they believe is about 2,000 years old.
The ship, which was found in the sea off the town on Varazze in the province of Liguria, is thought to be a Roman-era commercial vessel.
Fishermen in the area said they had been finding shards of pottery in their nets for years, prompting police divers to launch a search.
The ship is said to be in a very well-preserved condition.
“The peculiarity of this is that the wreck could be almost intact,” Lt Col Francesco Schilardi of the police divers’ group told the BBC.
“We believe it dates to sometime between the 1st Century BC and the 1st Century AD,” Lt Col Schilardi said.
The mud on the seabed had hidden but also protected the wreck, he added.
The divers say that study of the vessel should help to understand commercial activity in that era.
The ship is thought to have travelled on trade routes between Spain and what is now central Italy and was loaded with more than 200 clay amphorae likely to have contained fish, wine, oil and grain.

full story here

Roman-era boat found off Italy coast ‘almost intact’

Divers say they have discovered a ship off the coast of Italy which they believe is about 2,000 years old.

The ship, which was found in the sea off the town on Varazze in the province of Liguria, is thought to be a Roman-era commercial vessel.

Fishermen in the area said they had been finding shards of pottery in their nets for years, prompting police divers to launch a search.

The ship is said to be in a very well-preserved condition.

“The peculiarity of this is that the wreck could be almost intact,” Lt Col Francesco Schilardi of the police divers’ group told the BBC.

“We believe it dates to sometime between the 1st Century BC and the 1st Century AD,” Lt Col Schilardi said.

The mud on the seabed had hidden but also protected the wreck, he added.

The divers say that study of the vessel should help to understand commercial activity in that era.

The ship is thought to have travelled on trade routes between Spain and what is now central Italy and was loaded with more than 200 clay amphorae likely to have contained fish, wine, oil and grain.

full story here

124 notes

  1. romanitas reblogged this from poliorketes
  2. brian-my-left-testicle reblogged this from archaeology and added:
    Archaeology is so cool!!
  3. franzboas reblogged this from archaeology
  4. seashelllz reblogged this from howstuffworks
  5. stitch-n-time reblogged this from notenoughthyme
  6. deniseagnewnovelist reblogged this from archaeology and added:
    More great Roman archaeology.
  7. whatislongo reblogged this from archaeology
  8. luna-deluna reblogged this from archaeology
  9. ilikeboatsbitch reblogged this from archaeology
  10. notenoughthyme reblogged this from archaeology
  11. antema reblogged this from likeelectricthroughtheground
  12. mayra-quijotesca reblogged this from likeelectricthroughtheground
  13. misthought reblogged this from archaeology
  14. frstdlmncwd reblogged this from evenstrangerthandanger
  15. deweydefeats reblogged this from archaeology
  16. librarianswithattitude reblogged this from archaeology and added:
    Cool as balls!!
  17. insanepiphi reblogged this from archaeology and added:
    I’m a history nerd considering either museum studies or nautical archeology so I will probably repost stuff like this...
  18. letswalkunderthestars reblogged this from archaeology
  19. mellonikan reblogged this from likeelectricthroughtheground
  20. pseudobabbler reblogged this from blondimate
  21. blondimate reblogged this from archaeology
  22. nestofthemagpie reblogged this from archaeology
  23. brennabird reblogged this from archaeology
Page 1 of 1