http://www.wired.com/2016/05/franck-goddio-archeology/
The Underwater Archaeologist Who Surfaced Not One, But Two Ancient Egyptian Cities
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Caption: Underwater archaeologist Franck Goddio has discovered two submerged ancient Egyptian cities, Canopus and Thonis-Heracleion.Paolo Verzone
Caption: This stela, or carved monument, is now in the British Museum.Courtesy of The British Museum
Caption: A colossal statue of the god Hapy (also shown with Goddio in the first image) being pulled from the ocean.CHRISTOPH GERIGK/COURTESY OF FRANCK GODDIO/HILTI FOUNDATION
Caption: Goddio uses a mix of classic and high tech excavation techniques.CHRISTOPH GERIGK/COURTESY OF FRANCK GODDIO/HILTI FOUNDATION
The cities had been lost to history after mysteriously sinking beneath the sea. But while they may have once been hangouts for historical celebrities like Helen of Troy, finding and excavating the sites has been more gritty than glamorous. For all the high tech equipment Goddio used to locate the ruins (side-scan sonar, nuclear-resonance magnetometer), excavation is a meticulous process of dredging away the sediment, surveying the site, and diving into the (often polluted) water to bring things to the surface.
Luckily for us, Goddio shares Indiana Jones' opinion on where artifacts belong: This May the British Museum will put his best finds back in the public eye for the first time since about AD 800.
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=joJtOI_8IZs
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