Greece's rich underwater heritage has long been hidden from view, off-limits to all but a select few, mainly archaeologists. Scuba diving was banned throughout the country except in a few specific locations until 2005, for fear that divers might loot the countless antiquities that still lie scattered on the country's seabed. Ancient shipwrecks and even many more recent ones are still off-limits. Now that seems to be gradually changing, with a new project to create underwater museums.
Divers will be able to tour certain shipwrecks and non-divers will experience the sites through virtual reality in information centers on land. The first of these sites is the Peristera shipwreck, named for the uninhabited Greek island opposite Alonissos where it was discovered in the early 1990s. The cargo ship was laden with thousands of amphoras, or vases, probably containing wine, when it sank in the late 5th century B.C. All that survives is the cargo, the exposed parts of the wooden ship having long since rotted away. But the sight is spectacular.
Thousands of ancient vases, the vast majority intact, lie in layers. Fish, sponges and other sea creatures have made the amphoras their home, adding color and life to the site. In some places, the cargo towers above divers as they pass along the perimeter of the wreck. Dimitris Kourkoumelis, the lead archaeologist on the project preparing the site for visitors, stated:
"It is very impressive. Even I, who have been working for years in underwater archaeology, the first time I dived on this wreck I was truly impressed. It's different to see amphoras ... individually in a museum and different to see them in such concentration."
The wreck still holds mysteries. Only a small part has been excavated, and experts have yet to determine how or why it sank, or what other treasures it might have carried beneath the estimated 4,000 amphoras in its hold. There are indications a fire had broken out on board, but it's unclear whether that contributed to its sinking. The Peristera wreck is the largest ship of its time to have been found and its discovery was of major significance to historians. Elpida Hadjidaki, the first archaeologist to excavate the site, stated:
"Up to then, we thought that large ships that were carrying 1,500 amphoras and were up to 70 tons, they were built by the Romans in the 1st century B.C.. Well, now we have a ship that was not built in the 1st century B.C., it was built in the 5th century B.C., it carried 4,000 amphoras and God knows what else and it's 126 tons. "It's fantastic [to open it to visitors]. Twenty-five years ago, I was the first person that proposed that and people were jumping at me, they thought I was crazy. Why should we keep it to ourselves? We have to give knowledge to people."
Three other shipwrecks in the Pagasitic Gulf in central Greece are also included in the project, which is part of a European Commission-funded BlueMed program, which plans to expand the project to Italy and Croatia. More test dives will be held this summer and next year, with hopes of fully opening the sites to recreational diving in early 2021. Kourkoumelis, who noted it has taken a long time to get to the point of allowing visitors to access an ancient wreck, was thrilled.
"Accessible archaeological sites are one of the most interesting projects — not just a Greek project but a worldwide project. It took years. And that's logical, because underwater ancient sites and particularly ancient shipwrecks are exposed ... and fragile. All the conditions must be ensured so that these sites remain safe in the future and for future generations."
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