Wednesday, July 28, 2021

DISCOVERY! Ancient ship and burial ground discovered in underwater city in Egypt

Archaeologists and divers have made a huge discovery in the Mediterranean Sea of a 2,200 year old ancient Egyptian ship!  Wow! Here's the story: 


(Caption: Elaborate offerings were found in the burial ground. The decorated pot in this photo shows what appear to be images of waves.  (Image credit: Christoph Gerigk ©FranckGoddio/Hilti Foundation)

Ancient ship and burial ground discovered in underwater city in Egypt

By Owen Jarus - Live Science Contributor  

Galley sunk when it was slammed with blocks from famous temple of Amun.

Archaeologists have discovered the 2,200-year-old wreck of an ancient Egyptian ship that sank after being struck with giant blocks from the famous temple of Amun. The so-called galley, along with a burial ground, were discovered beneath the Mediterranean Sea in Thonis-Heracleion, a city that fell into the water long ago. 

The ship is called a fast galley, a type of vessel with a large sail that would have been propelled to relatively high speeds by a team of oarsmen. The recently discovered fast galley is 82 feet (25 meters) long with a flat keel, a feature that is commonly found among ancient vessels that navigated the Nile River. It "sank after being hit by huge blocks from the famed temple of Amun, which was totally destroyed [during] a cataclysmic event in the second century B.C.," a team of archaeologists said in an emailed statement released by the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology. 

That "cataclysmic event" was probably an earthquake, the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities said in a July 19 statement. The galley now lies beneath just over 16 feet (5 m) of clay and rubble from the temple.

Researchers used a new type of sonar to locate it. 

(Image: Blocks from the Temple of Amun fell on the galley sinking the ship. The vessel was found beneath 5 meters (16.4 feet) of clay and blocks. A sophisticated sonar had to be used to find the vessel. image credit: Christoph Gerigk ©FranckGoddio/Hilti Foundation)

"The finds of fast galleys from this period remain extremely rare," Franck Goddio, the president of the European Institute for Underwater Archaeology, said in the institute's statement. The ship was constructed with a mortise-and-tenon technique, in which pieces of wood with protrusions called tenons are placed into pieces of wood with holes called mortises cut into them. The result is a ship made of wood sections that interlock like a jigsaw puzzle. It's not clear what cargo, if any, the galley was carrying when it sank. 

At the site of this sunken city, the archaeologists also discovered a burial ground that was in use as far back as 2,400 years ago. The team found elaborately decorated pottery, including one piece that appears to have images of waves painted on it. 

Archaeologists also found a gold amulet depicting Bes, an Egyptian god associated with childbirth and fertility. Ancient Egyptians sometimes used images of the god to protect young children and women giving birth. 

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