Ancient Shipwrecks in Aegean Sea Investigated

News January 25, 2021

(Greece's Ministry of Culture and Sports)
SHARE:
Greece Kasos Shipwrecks
(Greece's Ministry of Culture and Sports)

ATHENS, GREECE—Tornos News reports that scientists and divers from the Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities of Greece’s Ministry of Culture and Sports and the Institute of Historical Research of the National Research Foundation explored shipwrecks in the Aegean Sea near the island of Kasos over a period of three years. The researchers explained that this area around Greece’s southernmost island was an important route for several different ancient cultures. They investigated a Roman shipwreck that carried oil from Spain and amphoras made in what is now Tunisia in the second and third centuries A.D.; a second ship carrying amphoras made in the North Aegean in the first century B.C.; and a third stocked with fifth-century B.C. amphoras from Mendi, which is located on Greece’s island of Euboea. To read about the world's oldest known shipwreck, go to "Ancient Shipwreck," one of ARCHAEOLOGY's Top 10 Discoveries of 2018.

  • Features November/December 2020

    In the Reign of the Sun Kings

    Old Kingdom pharaohs faced a reckoning that reshaped Egypt’s balance of power

    Read Article
    (Kenneth Garrett)
  • Letter from Israel November/December 2020

    The Price of Purple

    Archaeologists have found new evidence of a robust dye industry that endured on the Mediterranean coast for millennia

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Michael Eisenberg)
  • Artifacts November/December 2020

    Illuminated Manuscript

    Read Article
    (National Trust/Mike Hodgson)
  • Digs & Discoveries November/December 2020

    Our Coastal Origins

    Read Article
    (Courtesy Emma Loftus)