In
Homer's epics, mariners tell of sailing far and wide across the Mediterranean,
of braving fierce storms, of traveling for days on end with no land
in sight.
But modern scholars had doubts. Distrust about the actual routes grew
with the discovery of numerous old wrecks in shallow waters. In time,
the ancient sailors were viewed as hugging the coasts, mostly keeping
in sight of land. The heroic tales were probably fabulous, many scholars
argued, and the mariners more timid than their boasts.
Now, the discovery of an ancient wreck in the middle of the Mediterranean
is strengthening the old claims. The wreck site, some 200 miles from
Cyprus and nearly two miles deep, has been tentatively dated as 2,300
years old; it lies amid a graveyard of similar hulks. Clearly Greek
in origin, it is the deepest ancient ship ever discovered.
The find was accidental. In early 1999, a robot tethered to a surface
ship by a long cable was being directed to hunt the icy darkness of
the deep Mediterranean for a lost submarine. Suddenly, it lit up thousands
of amphorae - the clay jugs of antiquity used for storage. The pile
of ancient debris also held several anchors, pitchers, a serving bowl
and a large metal cooking pot.
The discovery team believes that the ship was a Hellenistic trader
sailing between Rhodes and Alexandria, and that the clay jars were
carrying wine.
"This was a supertanker of the ancient world," said Brett
A. Phaneuf of the Institute of Nautical Archaeology of Texas A&M
University, who is helping analyze the find.
The discovery was kept secret until the submarine was found and the
ancient wreck analyzed. It is unveiled in the current issue of Archaeology,
the magazine of the Archaeological Institute of America, a scholarly
group based in Boston.
"The deep sea is giving us increasing evidence of how the ancients
were sailing everywhere," said Dr. Anna Marguerite McCann, a
marine archaeologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
"This is exciting. I'm sure there's a lot more down there."
The deep wreck is well preserved. Its jars are mostly intact and beyond
the reach of fishing trawlers, which often damage artifacts. At the
site's edge, a wooden frame or deck beam, and a segment of planking,
protrude from sediments. The finders hope more wood lies intact under
the mud, amphorae and ballast stones.
The Nauticos
Corporation - the ship's finders - and the Institute of Nautical Archaeology
are planning to return to the site for more detailed exploration and
analysis.
"We're talking about a wreck dating to somewhere between Cleopatra
and Alexander the Great," said David W. Jourdan, the president
of Nauticos. "There are some very unique things down there."
Perhaps as many as four similar wrecks lie nearby, mute evidence of
old tragedies in middle of the Mediterranean.
If the ancients are to be believed, their ships often prowled the
open sea, and sank there as well.
In "The Odyssey," Homer recounts many feats, including how
Odysseus once sailed from Crete to North Africa - a stretch of at
least 200 miles over open water.
The Phoenicians, based in what is now Lebanon, during the first millennium
B.C. sailed west more than a thousand miles to found Carthage and
set up an ingenious system of way stations in the western Mediterranean
- in Sardinia, Ibiza and Spain. That led some scholars to argue that
the Phoenicians often sailed out of the sight of land.
Greek colonists traveled so far and so frequently that Plato likened
them to "frogs round a pond." Even the Bible tells of many
voyages across open waters, including Paul's to Rome.
Doubts about
the veracity of such claims arose mostly in the middle of the 20th
century as scuba divers found large numbers of ancient wrecks in shallow
waters, and scholars began to deconstruct ancient literature. After
all, the experts noted, the old mariners had no compasses.
|
Dr.
Elizabeth Lyding Will, a leading authority on ancient amphorae who
taught classics and archaeology at Amherst College and the University
of Massachusetts, said that for decades she hewed to the coastal interpretation.
"I fell for the line that the ancients were afraid," she
said in an interview. "So much that's in Greek and Latin literature
is not reliable."
Her skepticism was reinforced, she added, because most ancient wrecks
were being found "along the coast."
Echoing the coastal view was Lionel Casson, a professor of classics
at New York University. "Usually skippers of galleys stuck to
the shore, sailing from one landfall to the next," he wrote in
"The Ancient Mariners" in 1991. "When they had to travel
at night they steered by the stars, but such travel was strictly exceptional."
Evidence to the contrary started to emerge from the sea in the late
1980's and 1990's. A pioneer was Robert D. Ballard, the finder of
the Titanic, who was aided by Dr. McCann. He used robots and a submarine
to explore what was thought to be a trade route over open water between
Carthage and Rome and found that the region was indeed littered with
wrecks and artifacts. Similar finds in time emerged.
In retrospect, some experts say, the coastal interpretation now seems
like the old joke about the drunk who lost his keys. Asked why he
was looking so intently only under the street lamp, the drunk mumbled,
"That's where the light is."
The find in the inky depths of the eastern Mediterranean has now produced
the newest and best evidence to date of wide voyaging, archaeologists
say. The discovery was made two years ago while Nauticos was looking
for Dakar, the lost Israeli submarine that had disappeared three decades
earlier. Israel hired the company, a deep-sea contractor based in
Hanover, Md., to conduct the hunt.
Thomas K. Dettweiler of Nauticos, which often works for the United
States Navy, was managing the search when another expedition ship
radioed bad news: the robot sent down to inspect an intriguing target
had come up short on the submarine yet again.
"They were really disappointed," Mr. Dettweiler recalled.
"I asked, 'What was it?' And when they started describing things,
it got very exciting, the size and number of amphorae. They said there
were hundreds or thousands of them."
The team videotaped the site but then had to leave to resume the hunt
for the submarine.
After the voyage, Nauticos asked Mr. Phaneuf of the Institute of Nautical
Archaeology, who is working on his doctorate and has studied ancient
amphorae, to help analyze the find.
The wreck site is about 65 feet long and contains an estimated 2,000
to 3,000 amphorae. Most of the large clay jugs have two handles, which
eased their carrying. The amphorae of antiquity generally ranged between
two and three feet long, and held about seven gallons. Their shapes
and markings were distinctive to ease product recognition.
Mr. Phaneuf said most of the wreck's jugs, based on their distinctive
appearance and comparison to surviving examples of old amphorae, apparently
came from the ancient trading center of Rhodes and the nearby island
of Kos. They date, he added, to around the end of the third century
B.C. or the beginning of the second - during the Hellinistic era.
That time, after the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C., saw
the wide diffusion of Greek trade and culture.
Very few wrecks from
this period are known and none are in such a good state of preservation,
archaeologists said.
The wine of Kos was admired but was a relatively inexpensive grade,
shipped and bought in large quantities, Mr. Phaneuf said. The Rhodian
was often higher quality. Rhodes during this period controlled most
of the sea trade in the eastern Mediterranean, and did so up until
the Romans rose to power.
|
The
wreck site also disclosed parts for at least four large anchors, their
wooden shafts vanished but leaden collars and stocks visible. In ancient
times, anchors were often lost or needing repair, so many were usually
kept aboard a single ship.
Mr. Phaneuf said the lost Hellinistic ship, given its cargo and resting
place, appeared to be bound from Rhodes to Alexandria in Egypt. Why
it sank is unknown, perhaps a storm, accident or ship damage.
He said the Nauticos team found evidence of four more ancient wrecks
in the region and briefly videotaped one of them.
Mr. Jourdan, the president of Nauticos, said that if the ships were
all of the same era they might represent either long-distance trade
gone awry or a lost fleet blown off track. But if the wrecks turn
out to span many generations or centuries, he added, they will provide
hard evidence of a route for sustained ancient trade across the open
sea.
He said the team was trying to keep the exact positions secret "so
we can go back with the scientists" to do detailed analyses.
Mr. Jourdan added that Nauticos did salvage work on the Israeli submarine
last October and that now, with that concluded, it was free to talk
about the discovery of the ancient wrecks.
A paper on the Nauticos Web site, www.nauticos.com, discusses the
discovery and future plans. It was written by the company and the
Institute of Nautical Archaeology.
The two organizations are looking for a corporate sponsor to pay for
a return expedition, and they are planning a documentary on the discovery.
The goals of a return include making a detailed photo mosaic of the
wreck as a recovery guide. The archaeologists would then salvage one
or two of the Rhodian amphorae for analysis.
If the recovered amphorae are stamped with the typical markings, said
the paper, "we will be able to date this wreck to within about
a 20-year period."
On a return voyage, the other wrecks will also be examined if time
allows, and the joint paper suggests these lost ships may prove even
older and more valuable. That possibility, it said, was even "more
exciting" than discovering evidence of open-water trade routes.
The dream is a Minoan shipwreck.
In the Bronze Age, before iron was known, the Minoans were an advanced
prehistoric culture that ruled Crete and much of the Aegean, and sailed
widely on the eastern Mediterranean. They lived roughly between 2,500
and 1,000 B.C. and formed part of the first high civilization on European
soil.
No Minoan ship has ever come to light, archaeologists say, and if
one did it would be the earliest known shipwreck. The finders of the
Hellenistic wreck hope that the Minoans also plied the sea in the
region, and that at least one ship went down.
Dr. McCann, a visiting scholar at M.I.T., said the team's goal of
a Minoan shipwreck was tantalizing. "That would be the plum,"
she said. "That's the big thing everybody is after."
Thousands of amphorae, clay jugs used for storage, and a cooking pot
were among the artifacts in the wreckage of a Greek ship that sank
200 miles off Cyprus about 2,300 years ago. The ancient ship, nearly
two miles under the surface of the western Mediterranean, is the deepest
ever discovered. Reprinted by permission from nytimes.com © 2001
The New York Times Company. New York Times material may not be used
in any manner except for personal reference without the written permission
of The New York Times Company.
 |