The Peterborough Examiner

Sunken treasures off Albania’s coast

Ancient ships resting on the seabed off this rugged, rarely explored shore offer a glimpse of history

- ELENA BECATOROS

SARANDA, ALBANIA – Descending beneath the waves, the cloudy first few metres quickly give way to clear waters and an astonishin­g sight — dozens, perhaps hundreds, of tightly packed ancient vases lie on the seabed, testament to some long-forgotten trader’s unfortunat­e voyage more than 1,600 years ago.

A short boat ride away, the hulking frame of an Italian Second World War ship appears through the gloom, soldiers’ personal items still scattered in the interior, its encrusted railings and propeller now home to growing colonies of fish and sponges.

Off the rugged shores of Albania, one of the world’s least explored underwater coastlines, lies a wealth of treasures: ancient amphorae — long, narrow terracotta jugs — that carried olive oil and wine along trade routes between North Africa and the Roman Empire, wrecks with hidden tales of heroism and treachery from two world wars, and spectacula­r rock formations and marine life.

“From what I’ve seen so far, you can’t swim more than a few metres without finding something that’s amazing, whether it’s on the cultural history side or the natural history side, here in Albania,” said Derek Smith, a coastal and maritime ecologist and research associate who has been working with the non-profit RPM Nautical Foundation to explore the Albanian coastline for the past decade.

Now Albania’s National Coastline Agency is examining how best to study and protect its sunken attraction­s while opening them up to visitors in a nation that is virgin territory for the lucrative scuba-diving industry.

“The idea of presenting the Albanian underwater heritage is a new idea for the country because so far, there is very little known about the rich history of the Albanian coastline, and in particular the shipwrecks,” said agency head Auron Tare, who has been involved for the past 12 years with RPM Nautical Foundation’s underwater research. “I believe the time has come now that we should present to the world the wealth of this heritage that we have in our waters.”

Once more isolated than even North Korea, Albania has gradually opened up to internatio­nal tourism and shrugged off its former image as a hermit state that briefly turned into lawless bandit territory in the late 1990s.

But coastal land developmen­t has been burgeoning in an often anarchic fashion, and there are fears the more accessible wrecks could be plundered unless adequate protection­s are put into place.

Legislatio­n is expected to be passed soon to protect the country’s underwater heritage, while also granting some access to visitors.

Neighbouri­ng Greece, to Albania’s south, has struggled with balancing tourism while protecting and preserving its ancient artifacts.

Greece was so fearful of losing its underwater antiquitie­s it banned diving outright in all but a handful of places. Even today, diving is forbidden on any wreck — ship or plane — built more than 50 years ago, regardless of when it sank.

Albania is going for a more balanced approach.

“I’d say that in the near future the ancient wrecks should be open to scholars and research,” said Tare, who noted the country has also lost some of its underwater heritage to plundering in the last 20 years.

“Where(as) some of the modern wrecks, which do not have much to lose in the sense of looting, might be opened up to the dive industry.”

He estimated that with access to the more modern wrecks from the First or Second World War, diving could increase in Albania in the next five years.

The RPM Nautical Foundation, in co-operation with the coastal agency, has mapped out the seabed along about a third of the Albanian coastline, from Saranda near the Greek border to Vlora.

Using a combinatio­n of divers and high-tech equipment including sonar and a remotely operated underwater vehicle, or ROV, its research vessel has discovered nearly 40 shipwrecks.

“So far, RPM has documented from about third- and fourth-century B.C. through to First World War and Second World War contempora­ry shipwrecks,” said Smith.

“So we’ve got quite a big range of maybe 2,300 years worth of cultural resources here on the Albanian coastline that have really largely been unexplored.”

One of them is the tightly packed amphora pile near the shore. Known as the Joni wreck, it was a merchant vessel estimated to have had about four crew members and a cargo of mainly North African amphorae.

The fact that the pottery was North African “is really important because it shows the trade connection­s between the Adriatic and the North African coast,” said underwater archeologi­st Mateusz Polakowski, who has been working with RPM.

Small fish peer out from the necks of the jugs, which have been made part of the seabed with the passage of time.

The site hasn’t been excavated and archaeolog­ists believe several more layers of amphorae, as well as the wooden hull of the ship, might still lie intact beneath the seabed.

“A lot of these wrecks are very important as national heritage treasures,” said Polakowski. “Just as much as the biology of it is, just as important as the reefs and the fish population­s are, I think these shipwrecks not only become artificial reefs, but they also instil a sense of cultural identity.”

Albania sits at a strategic point at the entrance of the Adriatic Sea and along ancient trade routes from Italy to the Balkan Peninsula, Polakowski said. Much more remains to be explored.

“They have about 200 miles of coastline here,” said Smith. “Even though we feel like we’ve covered a tremendous amount of it ... there’s always more to be discovered.”

 ?? GEO DELVEROUDI­S/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Marine life grows on ancient terracotta jugs at the site of a shipwreck from more than 1,600 years ago off the coast of Albania.
GEO DELVEROUDI­S/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Marine life grows on ancient terracotta jugs at the site of a shipwreck from more than 1,600 years ago off the coast of Albania.
 ?? ELENA BECATOROS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Maritime ecologist Derek Smith examines sponge coral growing on an Italian Second World War ship.
ELENA BECATOROS/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Maritime ecologist Derek Smith examines sponge coral growing on an Italian Second World War ship.

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