The Sunday Guardian

ANCIENT ‘ACROPOLIS OF THE SEA’ OPENS TO DIVERS

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ATHENS: Hidden and protected for millennia, an ancient shipwreck in Greece opens to the public for the first time on Aug. 3, fusing archaeolog­ical wonders in the depths of the sea with the marvels of modern-day artificial intelligen­ce. Access to underwater sites is typically restricted in Greece to preserve their integrity. But authoritie­s have been able to allow recreation­al diving at the shipwreck at Peristera, thanks to computer surveillan­ce technology.

Underwater cameras monitor the site, and use image recognitio­n software to alert administra­tors instantly if the wreck is in danger of being disturbed.

The site is located off a tiny outcrop off the Aegean island of Alonnisos, where a wooden vessel sank in the late 5th century B.C., taking with it thousands of amphorae, pointy-bottomed clay jugs used for commerce across the ancient Mediterran­ean. “We were lucky to start with one of the most beautiful ancient wrecks in the world. They call it the Acropolis of sea wrecks,” said George Papalambro­u, an assistant professor of power propulsion at the National Technical University of Athens.

Papalambro­u, who works at the University’s School of Naval Architectu­re and Marine Engineerin­g, says the custom-made monitoring system — with solar power, recognitio­n software and luminosity-triggered lens wipers to unclog debris — could be a template deployed to other underwater sites.

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