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Underwater
archaeological projects range from the exploration of 19th
-century shipwrecks sunk below the ice of Canada's Arctic Sea to surveys
of artificial islands in Polynesian Ponape, and from inundated springs
in Florida containing the oldest physical remains of humans in the New
World to Bronze Age lake dwellings in the Swiss Alps. Because most of
the earth's surface is covered in water and the underwater world, until
recently, has been largely inaccessible, the underwater archaeological
repository is vast. Recent Elsewhere around
the world are the investigations of Pandora (1791) wrecked in Australia, sent
to bring Bounty and its crew
back from Polynesia; and the Indiaman nau Nossa
Senhora dos Martires (1606) and the Angra Bay ships (16th
to 19th century) in Portugal. Other notable projects are the VOC Amsterdam (1749) and VOC Hollandia (1743) both Dutch East Indiamen wrecked off southern coast of England; the Tudor warship Mary Rose (1545) in Portsmouth, England; the Molasses Reef Wreck (ca1525) in the Turks & Caicos Islands; the Swedish warships Vasa (1628) and Kronan (1676); sixteenth-century Basque whaling ships (1545) in Labrador, Canada; the VOC Batavia (1629) Australia's second oldest known shipwreck; and a Bronze Age vessel of the 14th century B.C. off the coast of Turkey. These are only
a very few of the many projects undertaken worldwide, which includes shipwrecks
in the Great Lakes, Vikings ships in Scandinavia, coastal trading ships
in the Gulf of Thailand, the remains of lakeside dwellings in the crannogs
in Scottish lochs, and early man sites.
Each of these projects is being undertaken by professional archaeologists
often working with dedicated volunteers.
Although spread across the globe and under the direction of many
different organizations, the goal of each is similar: to preserve our
shared underwater cultural heritage for the future by studying our past. Visit our Underwater
Links page to discover projects that have web sites and Read
More About It for publications on specific sites and general reading
on underwater archaeology. |