Levantine Sea
12 shipwrecks uncovered in the east Med dating from 300 BC
Archaeologists have found shipwrecks in the Mediterranean filled with hundreds of artefacts including Chinese porcelain, jugs, coffee pots, peppercorns and illicit tobacco pipes. A British-led expedition found a cluster of 12 ships on the sea bed, 1.2 miles below the surface of the Levantine Sea, using sophisticated robots. The ships were recovered in ancient'shipping lanes' that served spice and silk trades of the Greek, Roman and Ottoman empires, from 300 BC onwards. The ancient ships – including the biggest ever found in the Med – were unearthed in a muddy part of the eastern seabed between Cyprus and Lebanon, where remnants are often hard to find. The cluster of shipwrecks were found in the Levantine Basin in the east of the Mediterranean Sea.
- Europe > Middle East > Cyprus (0.26)
- Asia > Middle East > Lebanon (0.25)
- Atlantic Ocean > Mediterranean Sea > Levantine Sea (0.25)
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- Leisure & Entertainment (0.71)
- Transportation > Marine (0.50)
- Transportation > Freight & Logistics Services > Shipping (0.50)