By Michael Theodoulou Special
to The Christian Science Monitor
NICOSIA, CYPRUS
For centuries,
scholars have debated whether Homer's tales of epic, perilous
sea voyages were based on the real lives of ancient mariners.
The prevailing view has long rested on the side of safety: that
ancient cargo ships rarely took to the high seas, but kept instead
to the shallow waters along the coastlines.
But the discovery
of more than 2,000 wine jugs, plus boat pieces, and even dinnerware
among the remains of a 2,300-year-old shipwreck may prove to be
the modern vindication of Homer's heroic tales and show that ancient
seafaring peoples were more daring than originally thought.
MESSAGE
IN THE JUGS: Digital images show some of the thousands of amphorae
found at the site, two miles down, and 200 miles off the Cyprus
coast. They are dated tentatively at 2,300 years old.
PHOTO COURTESY OF NAUTICOS CORP.
Most ancient ships have been found in shallow waters, leading
many scholars to believe that the captains, sailing without compasses,
stayed in view of coastlines.
But this shipwreck
was discovered more than 200 miles off the Cyprus coast, and two
miles below the surface - the deepest ever found, says Brett Phaneuf
of the Institute of Nautical Archaeology of Texas A&M University
in College Station, who is helping analyze the find. "More
important than the depth is its distance from the shore,"
he says.
In spring
1999, Nauticos Corporation, an ocean-exploration company based
in Maryland, was using a deep-sea robot to search the Mediterranean
for an Israeli submarine that disappeared 33 years ago.
What the robot
found wasn't scraps of steel, but a sprawling field of amphorae
- large clay jugs - most of them intact. There was also a metal
cauldron and several lead anchors.
Detailed video
and sonar imagery was taken of the site, but the discovery was
kept secret until the submarine was found and the wreck analyzed
by the Institute of Nautical Archaeology.
Researchers
believe the ship was a Hellenic trader carrying wine and other
items from the ancient trading center of Rhodes and the nearby
island of Kos to Alexandria, Egypt.
Mr. Phaneuf
describes it as "a supertanker of the ancient world"
that was plying the open sea sometime between the time of Alexander
the Great and Cleopatra.
From the amphorae
strewn across a mound 80 feet long, the ship has been dated tentatively
at 2,300 years old.
As many as
four similar wrecks are thought to lie nearby, and archaeologists
suspect more could be found by thoroughly searching the route.
"If the
wrecks are all from the same general period, they may provide
detailed information about long-distance trade over open water
at a specific moment in history," according to an article
in Archaeology, the magazine of the Archaeological Institute of
America.
The article
continues: "If the wrecks span many centuries, they may provide
new and important evidence about trade between Crete, Cyprus,
Turkey, and Egypt over a broad span of time. This would be the
first evidence of sustained open-water traffic in the ancient
world."
It shows that
we tend to underestimate ancient peoples, Phaneuf says. "They
invented geometry, they had great astronomy, they were not timid,
and they understood that getting their goods to market quickly,
efficiently, and in bulk helped turn a profit," he says.
"They were not timid. They struck out across open seas."
Some experts
insist there should never have been any doubt about the prowess
of ancient Greek mariners.
They estimate
the vessel was probably similar in appearance to the Kyrenia II,
a replica of a 4th-century BC Greek trading vessel discovered
a mile off the coast of Cyprus in 1965.
Glafkos Kariolou,
the son of a pioneering Greek Cypriot diver who discovered that
wreck, has skippered the replica from Cyprus to Greece and insists
it is "completely wrong" for any modern scientist to
assume the ancients could not cross open seas.
They "possessed
an ocean of maritime information" he says. Many archaeologists
believe ancient Greek mariners 500 or 600 years before the Christian
era were sailing to Cornwall, England to bring tin and zinc back
to Greece.
Because of
the latest wreck's location and its cargo of Greek wine, it is
thought the ship was bound for Egypt when it perished, possibly
as a result of structural failure, collision, or storm-tossed
seas.
Because it
is so deep, most of the amphorae are well preserved, and the great
depth and cold of the sea may even have preserved a portion of
the ship's hull, according to the report in Archaeology.
Squatting
upright among the tightly packed amphorae is a large, intact metal
cauldron that Archaeology described as "the world's oldest
and longest continuously deployed sediment trap."
Thomas Dettweiler,
general manager and executive vice president of Nauticos says:
"Who knows what kind of tools or utensils we'll find down
there that will give us new understanding and answer many questions
about ancient civilizations."
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