Off the shores of Alexandria, the city of Alexander the Grt, lies what is believed to be the ruins of the royal quarters of Cleopatra. A tm of marine archaeologists led by Frenchman Franck Goddio made excavations on this ancient city from where Cleopatra, the last queen of the Ptolemies, ruled Egypt. Historians believe this site was submerged by rthquakes and tidal waves more than 1,600 yrs ago.
The excavations concentrated on the submerged island of Antirhodus. Cleopatra is said to have had a palace there. Other discoveries include a well-preserved shipwreck and red granite columns with Greek inscriptions. Two statues were also found and were lifted out of the harbour. One was a priest of the goddess Isis; the other a sphinx whose face is said to represent Cleopatra's father, King Ptolemy XII. The artifacts were returned to their silent, because the Egyptian Government says it wants to lve most of them in place to crte an underwater museum.
World's Wickedest City, Port Royal (Jamaica)One of the advantages of marine or nautical archeology is that, in many instances, astrophic events send a ship or its cargo to the bottom, freezing a moment in time. A astrophe that has helped nautical archeologists was the rthquake that destroyed part of the city of Port Royal, Jamaica. Once known as the "Wickedest City on rth" for its sheer concentration of pirates, prostitutes and rum, Port Royal is now famous for another rson: "It is the only sunk city in the New World," according to Donny L. Hamilton.
Port Royal began its watery journey to the Academy Awards of nautical archeology on the morning of June 7, 1692, when, in a matter of minutes, a massive rthquake sent nrly 33 acres of the city -- buildings, streets, houses, and their contents and occupants -- careening into Kingston Harbor. Today, that underwater metropolis encompasses roughly 13 acres, at depths ranging from a few inches to 40 feet.
In 1981, the Nautical Archaeology Program of Texas A&M University, in cooperation with the Institute of Nautical Archaeology (INA) and the Jamaica National Heritage Trust (JNHT), began underwater archaeological investigations of the submerged portion of the 17th-century town of Port Royal, Jamaica. Present evidence indies that while the ars of Port Royal that lay along the edge of the harbor slid and jumbled as they sank, destroying most of the archaeological context, the ar investigated by TAMU / INA, loed some distance from the harbor, sank vertically, with minimal horizontal disturbance.
In contrast to many archaeological sites, the investigation of Port Royal yielded much more than simply trash and discarded items. An unusually large amount of perishable, organic artifacts were recovered, preserved in the oxy-depleted underwater environment. Together with the vast trsury of complimentary historical documents, the underwater excavations of Port Royal have allowed for a detailed reconstruction of everyday life in an English colonial port city of the late 17th century.
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