700-year-old antiques recovered from
shipwreck
Tuoi Tre
Though the shipwreck is located less than 300 m from the
seashore, it took over five months to put stakes around it due to unfavorable
elements. Tuoi Tre
Many antiques dating back from the
13th century were recovered from the shipwreck off central Quang Ngai
province’s Binh Son district after a painstaking excavation that kicked off
on June 4.
Though the shipwreck is located less than 300 m from
the seashore, it took over five months to put stakes around it due to
unfavorable elements.
In still, clear seawater, the antiques could be easily
seen from above.
According to Dr. Nguyen Dinh Chien, vice head of the
Vietnam History Museum, unlike the antique excavations from five previous
shipwrecks, in which the work took one or two years due to underwater
excavation methods, this excavation is less time-consuming and safer thanks
to a new method.
The excavation site of the shipwreck in Quang
Ngai province's Binh Son district. Tuoi Tre
Two powerful generators were used, with one sucking in
sand and the other pumping seawater out while stakes and planks were used to
keep water from rushing in.
After almost two hours, the site was completely drained
out, exposing the shipwreck.
Excavators from Doan Anh Duong, the company in charge
of excavating the antiques, each bent down and picked up the pieces with
great care.
The antiques include bowls, plates and jars, which are
ingeniously decorated with intricate patterns.
The first antiques to be excavated from the
site. Tuoi Tre
According to Dr. Doan Ngoc Khoi, vice head of the Quang
Ngai museum, there is a high likelihood that the wrecked centuries-old ship
was a merchant ship which came from the north and stopped by the area to seek
shelter from storms before sinking.
In this same area, locals had earlier discovered three
other wrecked ships carrying antiques of various types, with most being
potteries from
“In the past, though the Binh Chau sea area wasn’t a
bustling port, it was characterized by big, unseasonable storms. As the
strait was also on the pottery and silk road, merchant ships would anchor
here to seek shelter from storms and sink,” Khoi elaborated.
The excavation will continue for a month before the
entire antiques are taken to the provincial museum, said Nguyen Dang Vu, head
of the provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.
There are two options to deal with the wrecked ship,
which measures some 24 m in length and 5m in width.
The first option, which is quite costly, is that its
separate parts will be recovered, assembled and displayed at the museum.
The other is that the ship will stay put and be
preserved and turned into an in-situ tourist attraction.
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Thứ Tư, 5 tháng 6, 2013
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