H@R
2006
HERITAGE
AT RISK
Special Edition
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk:
Managing Natural and Human Impacts
ICOMOS
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk:
Managing Natural and Human Impacts
Patrimoine Culturel Subaquatique en Péril :
Gérer les impacts naturels et humains
Patrimonio Cultural Subacuático en Peligro:
Gestión del impacto natural y humano
Heritage at Risk Special Edition
Hors Série Patrimoine en Péril / Patrimonio en Peligro Número Extraordinario
Edited by: Robert Grenier, David Nutley and Ian Cochran
Heritage at Risk Special Edition edited by ICOMOS
ICOMOS - International Council on Monuments and Sites
PRESIDENT:
SECRETARY GENERAL:
TREASURER GENERAL:
VICE PRESIDENTS:
Michael Petzet
Dinu Bumbaru
Giora Solar
Gustavo Araoz, Kristal Buckley, Tamas Fejerdy, Carlos Pernaut, Guo Zhan
OFFICE:
International Secretariat of ICOMOS
49 – 51 rue de la Fédération, 75015 Paris – France
ICUCH - International Scientiic Committee on Underwater Cultural Heritage
ICOMOS is very grateful to the UNESCO Division of Cultural Heritage, the French Ministry of Culture and
Communication and the Messerschmitt Foundation for their generous support of this publication.
EDITORS:
Robert Grenier ICUCH, David Nutley ICUCH,
Ian Cochran ICOMOS International Secretariat
TRANSLATIONS &
PROOFREADING:
ICOMOS International Secretariat:
Gaia Jungeblodt, José Garcia, Ian Cochran, Audra Brecher and Trinidad Rico
Parks Canada: Guy Lavoie
LAYOUT:
PRINTING & BINDING:
Ian Cochran ICOMOS International Secretariat
Biedermann Offsetdruck, München
© 2006 ICOMOS
Authors are solely responsible for the choice and the presentation of the facts contained in signed articles and for the
opinions expressed therein, which are not necessarily those of ICOMOS and do not commit the organisation. The
designations employed and the presentation of material in this edition of Heritage at Risk do not imply the expression of
any opinion whatsoever on the part of ICOMOS concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its
authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
Front Cover:
Back Cover:
Wreck of the Nord, Tasmania, Australia (Mark Spencer)
(Top) Sound of Campeche - Reconstruction of a modern shipwreck located in the coastal waters of
Campeche, based on information gathered in situ and completed by data found at a local archive
(Figure: INAH/SAS)
(Bottom) Cayman Islands - Anchor on the Glamis site, planned as the irst Cayman Islands Shipwreck
Preserve (Alexander Mustard)
Inside Front Cover: Orio IV - Vertical view of the wreck after the extraction of the iron mineral cargo placed in sacs around
the boat to provide protection against the river currents during the dig; seen at the top of the image is the
metallic bulkhead of the new port (Luis Mª Naya-INSUB)
Photo Credits:
Many photos’ credits can be found in the captions. Most other pictures were provided by the various authors or individuals
members of ICOMOS.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Contents
Contents
Introduction to the UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage — Guido Carducci ....................... i
Foreword — Michael Petzet .......................................................................................................................................................................... vii
Introduction — Robert Grenier ...................................................................................................................................................................... x
It’s All About the ‘P’s! — Rick Stanley ............................................................................................................................................................ 2
Florida’s Underwater Archaeological Preserves: Preservation through Education — Della A. Scott-Ireton ................................................... 5
Marine Aggregates and Prehistory — Antony Firth ......................................................................................................................................... 8
The Queen of Nations: A Shipwreck with Inluence — David Nutley .......................................................................................................... 11
RMS Titanic — Ole Varmer ........................................................................................................................................................................... 14
The Sound of Campeche: A Place Full of History — Pilar Luna E. .............................................................................................................. 17
The Monte Cristi “Pipe Wreck” — Jerome Lynn Hall ................................................................................................................................... 20
Foundations in Management of Maritime Cultural Heritage in the Cayman Islands — Margaret E. Leshikar-Denton................................ 23
The Long Struggle between Santa Fe and the San Javier River — Javier García Cano ............................................................................... 26
Pre-Colonial Fish Traps on the South Western Cape Coast, South Africa — John Gribble .......................................................................... 29
Protected Zones and Partnerships: Their Application and Importance to Underwater Cultural Heritage Management — David Nutley .... 32
Old Shipwrecks and New Dredging: An Elizabethan Ship in the Thames — Antony Firth .......................................................................... 35
The Playa Damas Shipwreck: An Early 16th-Century Shipwreck in Panama — Filipe Castro and Carlos Fitzgerald ................................ 38
The Sad Case of the ss Maori — John Gribble .............................................................................................................................................. 41
Atherley Narrows Fish Weirs — R. James Ringer ......................................................................................................................................... 44
The Four Commandments: The Response of Hong Kong SAR to the Impact of Seabed
Development on Underwater Cultural Heritage — Cosmos Coroneos .......................................................................................................... 46
Port Royal, Jamaica: Archaeological Past and Development Potential — Donny L. Hamilton ..................................................................... 49
In Situ Site Stabilization: The William Salthouse Case Study — Mark Staniforth ........................................................................................ 52
A Cheap and Effective Method of Protecting Underwater Cultural Heritage — Cosmos Coroneos ............................................................. 55
The In Situ Protection of a Dutch Colonial Vessel in Sri Lankan Waters — M. R. Manders......................................................................... 58
Managing Threats to Underwater Cultural Heritage Sites: The Yongala as a Case Study — Andrew Viduka ............................................... 61
To Dig or Not to Dig? The Example of the Shipwreck of the Elizabeth and Mary — Marc-André Bernier ................................................ 64
Japanese Midget Sub at Pearl Harbor: Collaborative Maritime Heritage Preservation — Hans Van Tilburg................................................ 67
The In Situ Protection of a 17th Century Trading Vessel in the Netherlands — M. R. Manders ................................................................... 70
Orio IV: The Archaeological Investigation of an Ore Carrier (patache venaquero) from the 16th-Century — Manuel Izaguirre ................ 73
HMS Swift: Scientiic Research and Management of Underwater Cultural Heritage in Argentina — Dolores Elkin................................... 76
The USS Monitor: In Situ Preservation and Recovery — John D. Broadwater ............................................................................................ 79
The Molasses Reef Wreck — Donald H. Keith .............................................................................................................................................. 82
Strategic Options with Regards to “Public Access – Awareness Raising” in Portugal — Francisco J. S. Alves .......................................... 85
Shipwreck: Threatened in Paradise — Paul F. Johnston ................................................................................................................................ 88
The Urbieta Wreck (Gernika) Basque Country — Manuel Izaguirre............................................................................................................. 90
Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage in French Polynesia:
Fifteen Years of Work by GRAN — Max Guérout and Robert Veccella........................................................................................................ 93
UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage ..................................................................................... 96
i UNESCO Introduction
Introduction to the UNESCO Convention
on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage
Guido Carducci
Chief, International Standards Section
Division of Cultural Heritage, UNESCO1
The elaboration and the adoption of this Convention relects the
awareness reached within the international community of the
cultural and historical signiicance of this heritage as well as of the
increasing threats this heritage faces.
The Convention has an annex, which is an integral part of the
Convention. While the latter covers general legal (wherever the
location of the heritage) and special (applicable depending on the
location of the heritage) provisions, the Annex has a technical nature
and beneited from a rather unanimous support at the time of its
adoption.
UNESCO welcomes this book, which provides several examples
of sites in danger and contributes to a better understanding of the
signiicance of underwater cultural heritage and of the role of the
2001 Convention.
The rapid progress in exploration techniques has certainly contributed
to making the seabed more accessible and exploitable. The natural
protection that depth has granted for centuries to underwater cultural
heritage, such as wrecks, is nowadays more fragile. The market and
the prices it may offer contribute to making exploration, recovery
and then trade in this material a lucrative activity.
As the Convention is irst of all an international legal instrument,
this brief presentation aims at providing some legal understanding of
the context (I), the main principles (II) and the possible ratiication
process (III) of the Convention2.
I) Existing Framework
At the international law level, the 1982 United Nations Convention
on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) is an important reference text.
Although it was drafted with a view to offering general provisions on
the law of the sea, it includes two provisions (Articles 149 and 303)
that refer speciically to archaeological and historical objects. Such
speciic reference not only conirms a speciicity of these objects,
differentiating them from “ordinary” objects, but the content of
these provisions (Articles 149 and 303 paragraph 1) establish an
obligation for States Parties to protect such objects.
For instance, Article 149 UNCLOS reads:
All objects of an archaeological and historical nature found in the
Area shall be preserved or disposed of for the beneit of mankind
as a whole, particular regard being paid to the preferential rights
of the State or country of origin, or the State of cultural origin, or
the State of historical and archaeological origin.
Article 303, Paragraph 1 spells out a duty for States Parties to protect
these objects found at sea and to cooperate for this purpose.
However, as a whole these two Articles do not speciically establish
the content, i.e. the measures to be taken (by States Parties), of these
duties to “preserve” (Article 149) and “protect” (Article 303).
Differently from UNCLOS, the 2001 UNESCO Convention
represents an international regulation speciic to underwater
cultural heritage. As any treaty, the Convention and this speciic
regulation are effective only among States Parties (i.e. States that
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
have joint the Convention). The 2001 Convention does not prejudice
the rights, jurisdiction or duties of states under international law,
including UNCLOS3. Every state may become a party to the 2001
Convention, regardless of whether it is a State Party to UNCLOS
or not.
II) General Principles of the 2001 Convention
Although some of the articles in this book may illustrate some
of the provisions of the Convention, the general principles of the
Convention may be summarized as follows:
1) “Underwater Cultural Heritage” means all traces of human
existence having a cultural, historical or archaeological character
which have been partially or totally under water, periodically or
continuously, for at least 100 years (Article 1).
2) The preservation in situ of underwater cultural heritage (i.e.
the current location on the seabed) is considered as the irst option
before allowing or engaging in any activities directed at this
heritage (Article 2, paragraph 5). Such activities may however be
authorized for the purpose of making a signiicant contribution to
the protection or knowledge of underwater cultural heritage (Rule
1 of the Annex);
The preference given to in situ preservation as the irst option:
•
stresses the importance of and the respect for the historical
context of the cultural object and its scientiic signiicance and
•
recognizes that such heritage is under normal circumstances
preserved underwater owing to the low deterioration rate and
lack of oxygen and therefore not necessarily per se in danger.
3) States Parties shall preserve underwater cultural heritage
for the beneit of humanity, and take action individually or jointly
therefore (Article 2, paragraph 3 and 4). The 2001 Convention
does not directly regulate the delicate issue of ownership of the
concerned cultural property between the various states concerned
(generally lag states and coastal states); it does however establish
clear provisions for the States concerned and for international
cooperation schemes.
4) The principle that underwater cultural heritage shall not be
commercially exploited (Article 2, paragraph 7) for trade or
speculation or irretrievably dispersed is not to be understood as
•
preventing professional archaeology, or the deposition of
heritage recovered in the course of a research project in
conformity with the Convention (Rule 2 of the Annex) or
•
preventing salvage activities or actions by inders as long as the
requirements under Article 4 of the Convention are fulilled
5) Indeed an important compromise between protection and
operational needs has been achieved in the 2001 Convention, in
particular under Article 4, as any activity relating to underwater
cultural heritage to which the Convention applies shall not be
subject to the law of salvage or law of inds, unless it:
•
is authorized by the competent authorities,
•
is in full conformity with the Convention and
•
ensures that any recovery of the underwater cultural heritage
achieves its maximum protection.
UNESCO Introduction ii
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
6) Depending on the current location of the underwater cultural
heritage, speciic regimes for cooperation between coastal and
lag states (and exceptionally other concerned states), are applicable
(Articles 7 – 13):
•
developing a national industry based on underwater cultural
heritage activities,
•
creating a protective infrastructure to support current and future
underwater tourism in a way compatible with the Convention,
States Parties have the exclusive right to regulate activities in
their internal and archipelagic waters and their Territorial Sea
(Article 7),
•
ensuring interstate cooperation and exchange of experiences,
•
offering a stronger position vis-à-vis merely commercial
excavation projects so that there are positive repercussions for
the local society and scientiic knowledge,
•
adopting or revising legislation according to international
standards and
•
becoming a more active party in the protection of cultural
heritage.
•
•
•
within their Contiguous Zone States Parties may regulate and
authorize activities directed at underwater cultural heritage
(Article 8) and
within the Exclusive Economic Zone, or the Continental
Shelf and within the Area (i.e. the waters outside national
jurisdiction), a speciic international cooperation regime
encompassing notiications, consultations and coordination
in the implementation of protective measures is established in
Articles 9 – 11 of the 2001 Convention.
7) The 2001 Convention focuses on the protection of the
underwater cultural heritage and does not cover nor affect the rules
of international law and State practice pertaining to sovereign
immunities, nor any State’s rights with respect to its State vessels
and aircraft. The Convention also does not create new grounds for
claiming or contending national sovereignty or jurisdiction, and
ensures respect to all human remains located in maritime waters
(Article 2).
8) Training in underwater archaeology, the transfer of technologies
and information sharing shall be promoted and public awareness
shall be raised concerning the value and signiicance of the
underwater cultural heritage (Articles 19-21).
III) Joining the 2001 Convention
Governments generally consider existing treaties and decide
whether they wish to ratify (or equivalent) them (and become a
“State Party”) or not.
Arguments in favour or against ratiication may be in part common
to most governments, and in part speciic to the situation of a given
State.
So far 6 States are party to the 2001 Convention4. Generally
speaking, joining the 2001 Convention may contribute to:
•
joining an international system for effective protection of the
underwater cultural heritage,
•
strengthening the ight against the growing looting and pillaging
of underwater cultural heritage and sites,
For those governments that decide to join the Convention, the main
phases of the process usually involve:
At the national level
a legal implementation phase in which, depending on the legal
system of the country concerned:
a. a law or decree may be enacted to authorize the consent of
the State to be bound by the Convention (by either ratiication,
or acceptance or approval for UNESCO Member States or by
accession for non Member States) and
b. together with the enactment of this law or decree, or
through separate legislation, the Convention is implemented
domestically either by an all-encompassing reference to its text
or by reproducing its content as national law.
At the international level
(i) the deposit of the instrument expressing the consent of the State
to be bound by the Convention (the instrument of ratiication, or
acceptance, or approval or of accession) with the Director-General
of UNESCO.
For such instrument a model is available5.
ii) the entry into force of the Convention:
a. the Convention as a whole enters into force three months after
the date of the deposit of the twentieth instrument (ratiication,
or acceptance, or approval or accession) with respect to the irst
twenty States Parties;
b. afterwards, the Convention enters into force vis-à-vis each
new State (beyond the irst twenty) three months after the date
of deposit of its respective instrument.
1. This brief introduction is written in the author’s personal capacity and
does not commit the Organization.
2. This presentation follows and develops in part an information
kit available at http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/ev.php-URL_
ID=23431&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
3. See Article 3.
4. Panama, Bulgaria, Croatia, Spain, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Nigeria.
5. See the information kit cited.
iii UNESCO Introduction
Introduction à la Convention de l’UNESCO
sur la protection du patrimoine culturel subaquatique
Guido Carducci
Chef, Section des normes internationales
Division du patrimoine culturel, UNESCO1
L’élaboration et l’adoption de cette convention relètent la conscience
de la communauté internationale sur l’importance culturelle et
historique de ce patrimoine ainsi que sur les menaces grandissantes
auxquelles ce patrimoine fait face.
La Convention comporte une Annexe, qui fait partie intégrale de
la Convention. Pendant que celle ci couvre les termes juridiques
généraux (où que le bien patrimonial soit situé) et les termes
spéciiques (applicables selon la localisation du bien patrimonial),
l’Annexe est de nature technique et a bénéicié d’un soutien unanime
au moment de son adoption.
L’UNESCO se réjouit du présent ouvrage, qui fournit une série
d’exemples de sites subaquatiques en danger et contribue à une
meilleure compréhension de la signiication du patrimoine culturel
subaquatique et du rôle de la Convention de 2001.
Le développement rapide des techniques d’exploration a
certainement rendu les fonds marins plus accessibles et exploitables.
La protection naturelle que la profondeur a fournie pendant des
siècles aux sites subaquatiques, comme les épaves, est aujourd’hui
fragilisé. Le marché et les prix qu’il offre contribuent à transformer
l’exploration, la récupération et le commerce avec ce matériel en
une activité très lucrative.
La Convention est avant tout un instrument légal international, cette
brève présentation vise à fournir le contexte légal (I), les principaux
principes (II) et le possible processus de ratiication (III) de la
Convention2.
I) Cadre existant
Au plan international, la Convention des Nations Unies sur le
droit de la mer de 1982 (« UNCLOS ») est un important texte
de référence. Même si elle a été élaborée en vue de proposer des
dispositions générales sur le droit de la mer, on y trouve néanmoins
deux dispositions (articles 149 et 303) qui traitent spéciiquement
des objets archéologiques et historiques. Cette référence explicite ne
conirme pas uniquement la spéciicité de ces objets, les distinguant
des objets ordinaires, mais le contenu de ces dispositions (articles
149 et 303, paragraphe 1) mettent les États parties dans l’obligation
de conserver ces objets.
Ainsi, l’article 149 de l’UNCLOS stipule que :
Tous les objets de caractère archéologique ou historique trouvés
dans la Zone sont conservés ou cédés dans l’intérêt de l’humanité
tout entière, compte tenu en particulier des droits préférentiels de
l’État ou du pays d’origine, ou de l’État d’origine culturelle, ou
encore de l’État d’origine historique ou archéologique.
patrimoine subaquatique. Comme tout traité, la Convention et cette
réglementation spéciique ne s’applique qu’entre Etats parties (c’est
à dire des Etats qui ont signé la Convention). Elle ne porte pas
atteinte aux droits, à la juridiction et aux devoirs des États en vertu
du droit international, y compris UNCLOS3. Tout État peut adhérer
à la Convention de 2001 de l’UNESCO, qu’il soit ou non partie à
l’UNCLOS.
II) Principes Généraux de la Convention de 2001
Bien que certains des articles de cet ouvrage peuvent illustrer
certaines dispositions de la Convention, les principes généraux de
la Convention peuvent être résumés comme suit:
1) On entend par « patrimoine culturel subaquatique » toutes
les traces d’existence humaine présentant un caractère culturel,
historique ou archéologique qui sont immergées, partiellement ou
totalement, périodiquement ou en permanence, depuis 100 ans au
moins (article premier).
2) La conservation in situ du patrimoine culturel subaquatique (à
savoir sa localisation actuelle dans le fond marin) est considérée
comme l’option prioritaire avant que toute intervention sur ce
patrimoine ne soit autorisée ou entreprise (article 2, paragraphe 5).
De telles interventions peuvent toutefois être autorisées lorsqu’elles
contribuent de manière signiicative à la protection ou à la
connaissance dudit patrimoine (Règle 1 de l’Annexe).
Le fait de considérer la conservation in situ comme l’option
prioritaire :
•
souligne l’importance du contexte historique et de la
signiication scientiique de l’objet culturel ainsi que le respect
qu’il faut lui accorder, et
•
prend en considération le fait que dans des conditions normales,
ce patrimoine est bien préservé dès lors qu’il est immergé, vu
l’absence d’oxygène et la lenteur de la dégradation, et que donc,
par principe, il ne se trouve pas nécessairement en danger.
3) Les États parties préservent le patrimoine culturel subaquatique
dans l’intérêt de l’humanité et prennent, individuellement ou, s’il y a
lieu, conjointement, les mesures appropriées, (article 2, paragraphes
3 et 4). La Convention de 2001 ne règle pas directement le problème
épineux de la propriété des biens culturels entre les divers États
concernés (généralement les États du pavillon et les États côtiers) ;
elle contient cependant des dispositions claires pour les États
concernés et propose des plans de coopération internationale.
4) Le principe selon lequel le patrimoine culturel subaquatique ne
doit faire l’objet d’aucune exploitation commerciale (article 2,
paragraphe 7) à des ins de transaction ou de spéculation, ni être
dispersé irrémédiablement ne doit pas être compris comme :
•
empêchant l’archéologie professionnelle ou le dépôt
d’éléments du patrimoine récupérés dans le cadre d’un projet
de recherche conduit en conformité avec la Convention (Règle
2 de l’Annexe) ou
•
empêchant les activités de sauvetage ou les interventions de
chasseurs de trésors tant que les dispositions de l’article 4 de la
Convention sont respectées.
Article 303, Pararagraphe 1 stipule l’obligation des Etats parties à
protéger les objets trouvés en mer et coopérer à cet égard.
Néanmoins, l’ensemble de ces deux articles n’établit pas le contenu,
c’est-à-dire les mesures a prendre (par les Etats parties), de cette
obligation de « sauvegarder» (Article 149) et « protéger » (Article
303).
A la différence de UNCLOS, la Convention de 2001 représente
bien une réglementation internationale spéciique pour le
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
5) En effet, la Convention de 2001, en particulier son Article 4, a
su parvenir à un compromis signiicatif entre protection et besoins
opérationnels, aucune activité concernant le patrimoine culturel
UNESCO Introduction iv
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
subaquatique à laquelle la Convention s’applique n’est soumise au
droit de l’assistance ni au droit des trésors, sauf si :
•
renforcer la lutte contre le pillage de plus en plus fréquent du
patrimoine et des sites culturels subaquatiques,
•
elle est autorisée par les services compétents,
•
•
elle est pleinement conforme à la Convention et
développer une industrie nationale autour des activités liées au
patrimoine culturel subaquatique,
•
•
elle assure que la protection maximale du patrimoine
culturel subaquatique lors de toute opération de
récupération soit garantie.
créer une infrastructure qui protège et favorise le tourisme
subaquatique actuel et à venir, conformément à la Convention,
•
s’assurer que les États coopèrent entre eux et échangent leurs
expériences,
•
s’associer à un système international qui protège eficacement
le patrimoine,
•
pouvoir faire preuve de plus de fermeté vis-à-vis des projets de
fouilles à but purement lucratif ain d’en obtenir des retombées
positives pour la société locale et le savoir scientiique,
•
adopter ou réviser la législation nationale selon les normes
internationales,
•
jouer un rôle plus actif dans la protection du patrimoine
culturel et
•
accorder au patrimoine culturel subaquatique plus de visibilité
et de reconnaissance.
6) Selon la localisation actuelle du patrimoine culturel subaquatique,
des régimes spéciiques de coopération entre les États côtiers et les
États du pavillon (et exceptionnellement d’autres États concernés)
s’appliquent (articles 7-13) :
•
•
•
les États parties ont le droit exclusif de réglementer les
interventions dans leurs eaux intérieures, leurs eaux
archipélagiques et leur mer territoriale (article 7),
dans leur zone contiguë, les États parties peuvent réglementer
et autoriser les interventions sur le patrimoine culturel
subaquatique (article 8) et
dans la zone économique exclusive, ou sur le plateau
continental et dans la Zone (à savoir dans les eaux au-delà
des limites de la juridiction nationale), les articles 9 à 11 de
la Convention de 2001 établissent un régime spéciique de
coopération internationale qui prévoit des notiications, des
consultations et une coordination dans la mise en oeuvre de
mesures de protection.
7) La Convention de 2001 se concentre sur la protection du
patrimoine culturel subaquatique et ne couvre ni modiie les règles
du droit international et la pratique des États relatives aux immunités
souveraines, ou l’un des quelconque droits d’un État, concernant
ses navires et aéronefs d’État. La Convention ne peut également
pas servir à faire valoir, soutenir ou contester une revendication
de souveraineté ou juridiction nationale et veille à ce que tous les
restes humains immergés dans les eaux maritimes soient dûment
respectés. (Article 2).
8) Il est nécessaire de promouvoir la formation à l’archéologie
subaquatique, le transfert de technologie ainsi que le partage de
l’information et sensibiliser le public à la valeur et l’intérêt du
patrimoine culturel subaquatique (articles 19-21).
III) Adhérer à la Convention de 2001
Les gouvernements en général prennent en considération les traits
existants et décident si ils souhaitent les ratiier (ou autre) ou non et
donc devenir un Etat partie ou pas.
Les arguments pour ou contre la ratiication sont en partie communs
à la plupart des gouvernements, et en partie spéciiques à la situation
d’un Etat particulier.
Jusqu’ici six Etats parties ont ratiié la Convention de 20014. En
général, ratiier la Convention de 2001 contribuerait à :
Pour les gouvernements qui décident d’adhérer à la Convention, la
procédure d’adhésion prévoit généralement :
Au niveau national
(i) une phase de mise en place légale durant laquelle, selon le
système juridique du pays concerné,
a) une loi ou un décret peut être promulgué pour autoriser le
consentement de l’État à être lié par la Convention (soit par
ratiication, acceptation ou approbation pour les États membres
de l’UNESCO, soit par adhésion pour les États non
membres) et
b) parallèlement à la promulgation de cette loi ou de ce décret,
ou au moyen d’une législation distincte, la Convention est
appliquée sur le plan national soit par une référence globale à
son texte, soit par une reprise de son contenu dans la législation
nationale.
Au niveau international
(i) Le dépôt de l’instrument exprimant le consentement de l’État à
être lié par la Convention (instrument de ratiication, d’acceptation,
d’approbation ou d’adhésion) auprès du Directeur général de
l’UNESCO.
En ce qui concerne cet instrument, un modèle est proposé5.
(ii) L’entrée en vigueur de la Convention :
a) pour les vingt premiers États parties, la Convention, dans
son intégralité, entre en vigueur trois mois après la date de
dépôt du vingtième instrument de ratiication, d’acceptation,
d’approbation ou d’adhésion ;
b) ensuite, elle entre en vigueur pour chaque nouvel État (à
partir du vingt et unième) trois mois après la date de dépôt de
son instrument respectif.
1. Cette brève introduction est écrite par l’auteur dans sa qualité personnelle et n’engage pas l’Organisation.
2. Cette présentation suit et développe en partie un kit d’information disponible sur http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/ev.php-URL_
ID=23431&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
3. Voir Article 3.
4. Panama, Bulgarie, Croatie, Espagne, Jamahiriya arabe libyenne, Nigeria.
5. Voir le kit d’information cité.
v UNESCO Introduction
Introducción a la Convención de la UNESCO
sobre la Protección del Patrimonio Cultural Subacuático
Guido Carducci
Jefe, Sección de Normas Internacionales
División del Patrimonio Cultural, UNESCO1
La elaboración y la adopción de esta Convención releja la
conciencia de la comunidad internacional sobre la importancia
cultural e histórica de este patrimonio y de la amenazas cada vez
mayores que corre.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
A diferencia de UNCLOS, la Convención de 2001 representa
una norma referida especíicamente al patrimonio cultural
subacuático. Como todos los tratados, la Convención y esta norma
especiica es efectiva solo entre los Estados partes (a saber los
Estados que han suscrito la Convención). Nada de lo dispuesto en la
Convención de 2001 va en perjuicio de los derechos, la jurisdicción
ni las obligaciones que incumben a los Estados en virtud del derecho
internacional, incluida la UNCLOS3.Cualquier Estado puede ser
Parte en ella, con independencia de que lo sea o no en la UNCLOS.
La Convención incluye un anexo que es parte integral de la
Convención. Mientras ésta cubre disposiciones generales
(independientemente de la localización del patrimonio) y especiales
(aplicables dependiendo de la localización de este patrimonio),
el anexo es de carácter técnico y recibió un apoyo unánime en el
momento de su adopción.
II) Principios Generales de la Convención de 2001
UNESCO agradece la publicación de este libro, el cual proporciona
varios ejemplos de sitios en peligro y contribuye a un mejor
entendimiento de la importancia del Patrimonio Cultural Subacuático
y del papel de la Convención de 2001.
1) Por “patrimonio cultural subacuático” se entiende “todos
los rastros de existencia humana que tengan un carácter cultural,
histórico o arqueológico, que hayan estado bajo el agua, parcial o
totalmente, de forma periódica o continua, por lo menos durante 100
años” (Artículo 1).
No hay duda de que el rápido perfeccionamiento de las técnicas
de exploración ha facilitado que los fondos marinos sean más
accesibles y explotables. La protección natural que la profundidad
ha concedido durante siglos al Patrimonio Cultural Subacuático,
como los restos de navíos, está actualmente más en precario. El
mercado y los precios que ofrece pueden contribuir a hacer que la
exploración, el rescate y el comercio de este material se convierta
en una actividad lucrativa.
Aunque algunos de los artículos de este libro ilustran unas
disposiciones de la Convención, los principios generales se pueden
resumir así:
2) La preservación in situ del patrimonio cultural subacuático (esto
es, su ubicación actual en el lecho marino) deberá considerarse
la opción prioritaria antes de autorizar o emprender actividades
dirigidas a ese patrimonio (párrafo 5 del Artículo 2). Pese a ello,
podrán autorizarse tales actividades cuando constituyan una
contribución signiicativa a la protección, el conocimiento o el
realce de ese patrimonio (Norma 1 del Anexo).
Como la Convención es en primer lugar un instrumento legal
internacional, esta breve presentación aspira a proveer un
entendimiento legal del contexto (I), los principios fundamentales
(II) y del eventual proceso de ratiicación de la Convención (III)2.
El hecho de privilegiar la preservación in situ como opción más
deseable:
•
subraya la importancia y el interés cientíico del contexto
histórico de los bienes culturales y la necesidad de respetarlo y
I) Marco Existente
•
constituye un reconocimiento de que, en circunstancias
normales, ese patrimonio se conserva bien bajo el agua gracias
a una tasa de deterioro baja y a la escasez de oxígeno, y de que
por lo tanto no está, per se, necesariamente en peligro.
En el plano internacional la Convención de las Naciones Unidas
sobre el Derecho del Mar de 1982 (UNCLOS) es un importante texto
de referencia. Aunque fue redactado con el in de establecer normas
generales en materia de derecho del mar, contiene dos disposiciones
(Artículo 149 y Artículo 303) referidas especíicamente a los objetos
de interés arqueológico e histórico. No solo esta alusión especíica
conirma la especiicidad de dichos objetos, distinguiéndolos de
los objetos ordinarios, sino tambien obliga a los Estados Partes a
protegerlos.
Artículo 149, por ejemplo, reza como sigue:
Todos los objetos de carácter arqueológico e histórico hallados en
la Zona serán conservados o se dispondrá de ellos en beneicio
de toda la humanidad, teniendo particularmente en cuenta los
derechos preferentes del Estado o país de origen, del Estado de
origen cultural o del Estado de origen histórico y arqueológico.
Articulo 303, Par. 1 explica en detalle la obligación por los Estados
Partes de proteger los objetos encontrados en el fondo del mar y de
cooperar para este in.
Sin embargo, esos dos artículos no bastan en su conjunto para
articular el contenido de esta obligación de « conservar » (Art. 149)
y « proteger » (Art. 303), a saber las medidas que deben tomar los
Estados Partes.
3) Los Estados Partes preservarán el patrimonio cultural
subacuático en beneicio de la humanidad y adoptarán, individual o
colectivamente, todas las medidas necesarias a tal efecto (párrafos 3
y 4 del Artículo 2). La Convención no contiene disposición alguna
para dirimir directamente el delicado asunto de la propiedad de un
bien cultural en disputa entre varios Estados (que suelen ser el del
pabellón y el ribereño). Sí contiene, en cambio, claras disposiciones
referidas a los Estados en cuestión y a mecanismos de cooperación
internacional.
4) El principio de que el patrimonio cultural subacuático no debe
ser explotado comercialmente (párrafo 7 del Artículo 2) con ines
de lucro o especulativos, ni tampoco ser diseminado de forma
irremediable, no será interpretado de tal manera que:
•
prohíba el ejercicio de la arqueología profesional o el depósito
de bienes del patrimonio recuperados en el curso de un proyecto
de investigación ejecutado de conformidad con la Convención
(Norma 2 del Anexo),
•
impida actividades o acciones de rescate por parte de los
descubridores, en la medida en que éstas cumplan los requisitos
establecidos en el Artículo 4 de la Convención.
UNESCO Introduction vi
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
5) En la Convención de 2001, en efecto, se llega a un notable
compromiso (Artículo 4) entre el imperativo de protección y las
necesidades operativas, pues ninguna actividad relativa al patrimonio
cultural subacuático a la que se aplique la Convención estará sujeta
a las normas sobre rescate y hallazgos, a menos que:
•
reforzar la lucha contra los actos cada vez más numerosos de
saqueo y pillaje del patrimonio cultural subacuático y los sitios
donde éste se encuentra,
•
desarrollar en el país una rama de actividad económica basada
en actividades que guarden relación con el patrimonio cultural
subacuático,
•
esté autorizada por las autoridades competentes,
•
esté en plena conformidad con la Convención y
•
•
se garantice que toda operación de recuperación de patrimonio
cultural subacuático se realice con la máxima protección de
éste.
crear una infraestructura de protección para apoyar, en el
presente y el futuro, un tipo de turismo subacuático compatible
con la Convención,
•
garantizar la cooperación entre Estados y el intercambio de
experiencias,
•
integrarse en un sistema internacional para la protección
efectiva del patrimonio,
•
gozar de una posición más fuerte ante proyectos de excavación
que sólo persigan ines de lucro y lograr así que también
sean beneiciosos para la sociedad local y para el progreso
cientíico,
•
promulgar o revisar textos legislativos con arreglo a las normas
internacionales,
•
participar más activamente en la protección del patrimonio
cultural y
•
conferir más notoriedad y reconocimiento al patrimonio
cultural subacuático.
6) Dependiendo de la ubicación actual del patrimonio cultural
subacuático, se aplicarán regímenes especíicos de cooperación
entre los Estados de pabellón y ribereños (y excepcionalmente
otros Estados interesados) (Artículos 7 a 13):
•
los Estados Partes tienen el derecho exclusivo de reglamentar
y autorizar las actividades dirigidas al patrimonio cultural
subacuático en sus aguas interiores y archipelágicas y su mar
territorial (Artículo 7),
•
los Estados Partes podrán reglamentar y autorizar las
actividades dirigidas al patrimonio cultural subacuático en su
zona contigua (Artículo 8) y
•
para actuar dentro de la zona económica exclusiva o la plataforma
continental y dentro de la Zona (es decir, las aguas fuera de la
jurisdicción nacional), los artículos 9 a 11 de la Convención
deinen un régimen especíico de cooperación internacional
que entraña notiicaciones, consultas y coordinación en la
aplicación de medidas de protección.
7) La Convención centra su atención sobre el patrimonio cultural
subacuático y nada de lo dispuesto en ella cubre o modiica las
normas de derecho internacional y la práctica de los Estados relativas
a las inmunidades soberanas o cualquiera de los derechos de un
Estado respecto de sus buques y aeronaves de Estado. . Ningún
acto o actividad realizado en virtud de la presente Convención
servirá de fundamento para alegar, oponerse o cuestionar cualquier
reivindicación de soberanía o jurisdicción nacional, y la Convencion
garantiza por que se respeten debidamente los restos humanos
situados en las aguas marítimas
8) La Convención de 2001 obliga a promover la formación
en arqueología subacuática, la transferencia de tecnología y el
intercambio de información, y a sensibilizar a la opinión pública
acerca del valor y la importancia del patrimonio cultural subacuático
(Artículos 19 a 21).
III) Adherirse a la Convención de 2001
En general, los gobiernos consideran los tratados existentes y
deciden si quieren ratiicarlos (o equivalente) y ser Estado parte o
no.
Argumentos en favor o en contra de la ratiicación pueden ser en
parte comun para la mayoría de los gobiernos, y en parte especíicos
a la situación de un Estado dado
Hasta ahora 6 Estados son parte de la Convencion de 20014. En general,
el hecho de ser Parte en la Convención de 2001 sería útil para:
Para los gobiernos que deciden pasar a ser Parte en la Convención,
en general el procedimiento entraña los siguientes pasos:
En el plano nacional
i) una fase de aplicación jurídica en la cual, dependiendo del sistema
jurídico del país en cuestión:
a) se promulga una ley o decreto para autorizar al Estado a que
consienta en vincularse a lo dispuesto en la Convención (por
la vía de la ratiicación, aceptación o aprobación, en el caso de
Estados Miembros de la UNESCO, o de la adhesión, en el de
Estados no Miembros); y
b) junto con la aprobación de esa ley o decreto, o bien mediante
otra disposición legislativa, se aplica la Convención dentro del
país, ya sea con una referencia global a su texto o promulgando
una ley nacional que reproduzca su contenido.
En el plano internacional
i) el depósito ante el Director General de la UNESCO del instrumento
por el que el Estado consiente en vincularse a la Convención
(instrumento de ratiicación, aceptación, aprobación o adhesión);
Para este instrumento, hay un modelo disponible5.
ii) la entrada en vigor de la Convención:
a) la Convención como tal entra en vigor para los veinte primeros
Estados Partes a los tres meses de la fecha de depósito del
vigésimo instrumento de ratiicación, aceptación, aprobación o
adhesión;
b) posteriormente, para cada nuevo Estado Parte (después de los
veinte primeros), la Convención entra en vigor tres meses después
de la fecha de depósito del correspondiente instrumento.
1. Esta breve introducción es escrita a titulo personal del autor y no
compromete a la Organización.
2. Esta presentación sigue y desarrolla en parte una carpeta de
información disponible en http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/ev.php-URL_
ID=23431&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html
3. Ver Artículo 3.
4. Panamá, Bulgaria, Croacia, España, amahiriya Arabe Libia, Nigeria.
5. Ver la carpeta de información citada.
vii Foreword
Foreword
Michael Petzet
President
ICOMOS International
When in November 2001 the UNESCO General Assembly
adopted the new Convention on the Protection of the
Underwater Cultural Heritage, no one expected that
explaining and promoting the ratiication of this Convention
would have proved to be such a dificult task, considering
the clear advantages it provides for maritime and riverside
countries. In fact, ICOMOS and UNESCO were to experience
the ignorance and mistrust that the sea has given rise to in men
throughout history. The depths of this mysterious universe,
which covers four-ifths of our planet’s surface, have only
recently become accessible or conquerable, several decades
after the conquest of space. Yet this immense part of our
universe has served as a communication and transport route
for thousands of years, allowing mankind and its multiple
civilisations to develop. Unique relics of lost civilisations are
scattered on the ocean loors, and the beds of rivers and lakes,
including in particular sunken ships.
As the great maritime historian Michel Mollat du Jourdain
stated so well, historians have for too long ignored the sea,
its ishermen and its sailors. The same is true of international
organisations such as the United Nations, UNESCO and
ICOMOS. The United Nations’ International Convention
on the Law of the Sea was not introduced until 1982, and
only in 2001, almost twenty years later, did UNESCO adopt
the Convention for the Protection of Underwater Cultural
Heritage, one of its most recent. Finally, it was only twentyive years after its foundation that ICOMOS saw the birth
of its International Scientiic Committee dedicated to the
protection and management of underwater cultural heritage
(ICUCH).
This young Scientiic Committee, founded on the initiative
of Australia in 1991, and initially composed of eighteen
members, the majority highly specialised and recognised
in the discipline of underwater archaeology, received as its
irst mandate the task of developing a Charter dedicated to
the proper management of the underwater cultural heritage.
The text produced by ICUCH was adopted in 1996 during
the ICOMOS General Assembly held in Soia, Bulgaria. This
document, created to serve as a guide and as the basis, on
the operational level, for the drafting of the future UNESCO
Convention, is known as the ICOMOS Charter on the Protection
and Management of Underwater Cultural Heritage.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
This ICOMOS charter met with such success during the
four years of deliberations it took at UNESCO to develop
an international convention, that inally it was incorporated
almost in full as an annex. This annex-charter is today an
integral part of the Convention. Several inluential countries
have not hesitated to declare that the ICOMOS charter
constituted the heart and soul of the said Convention and that,
without this text, a Convention would never have seen the
light of day. This charter was unanimously supported by an
assembly which was nevertheless partially divided over the
content of the actual Convention, a rather juridical text. All
of these countries in return committed themselves to put the
ICOMOS charter into practise.
ICOMOS notes, not without some pride, that its Charter for
the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage, now also
Annex to the 2001 Convention, is currently being partially
or completely implemented in a number of countries,
including some important maritime powers. Opposed to
certain juridical aspects of the Convention, many of these
abstained from voting in favour of the new Convention. Even
in countries strongly in favour of the Convention who, like
Canada, are recognized for their management of underwater
cultural heritage, this annex has become a major asset which
facilitates and allows management and protection to be
standardized, even before they ratify the Convention. In fact,
by implementing the annex those countries are applying the
essentials of the said Convention.
It is not surprising that, considering the relatively recent
adoption of the Convention and establishment of the
ICOMOS International Scientiic Committee on Underwater
Cultural Heritage (ICUCH), this irst volume dedicated to
the Underwater Cultural Heritage comes rather late in the
ICOMOS Heritage at Risk series, as a special edition. It
was time and important for ICOMOS and, without doubt,
for UNESCO, that such a publication be produced to raise
awareness and foster understanding of the nature of this
cultural heritage and the problems it faces world wide:
ICOMOS is proud of this irst attempt and also hopes that
this publication will serve to stimulate the interest of our
National Committees, helping them to better understand and
support the efforts of those who in their respective countries
are ighting to protect, manage and promote this important,
and threatened, part of our common cultural heritage.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Avant-propos
Michael Petzet
Président
ICOMOS International
Lors de l’adoption en novembre 2001 par l’Assemblée
Générale de l’UNESCO du texte de la nouvelle Convention
pour la protection du Patrimoine culturel subaquatique, nul ne
s’attendait à affronter une tâche aussi dificile pour expliquer
et promouvoir la ratiication de cette convention pourtant si
avantageuse pour les pays maritimes et riverains. De fait,
l’ICOMOS et l’UNESCO allaient refaire l’expérience de
l’ignorance et de la méiance que la mer a suscitée auprès
des hommes au cours des temps. Les profondeurs de cet
univers mystérieux qui recouvre les quatre cinquièmes de la
surface de notre planète n’ont été accessibles et conquises
que tout récemment, plusieurs décennies après la conquête
de l’espace. Pourtant cette immense partie de notre univers
avait servi de voie de communication et de transport depuis
des millénaires et avait permis à l’homme et ses multiples
civilisations de se développer. Des vestiges uniques de
civilisations disparues se trouvent disséminés sur les fonds
submergés, en particulier les navires coulés.
Comme l’avait si bien indiqué le grand historien maritime
Michel Mollat du Jourdain, les historiens ont pendant trop
longtemps ignoré la mer, ses pêcheurs et ses marins. Il en
va de même pour les organismes internationaux comme les
Nations Unies, l’UNESCO et l’ICOMOS. La convention
internationale de l’ONU sur les droits de la mer est venue
bien tardivement en 1982 et près de vingt ans plus tard,
la convention pour la protection du patrimoine culturel
submergé fut une des dernières adoptées par l’UNESCO,
soit en novembre 2001. Enin, il aura fallu attendre près
de trente ans après sa fondation, soit en 1991, pour que
l’ICOMOS voit naître en son sein un Comité Scientiique
International dédié à la protection et à la gestion des biens
culturels subaquatiques (ICUCH).
Ce jeune Comité Scientiique fondé en Australie et formé
initialement de dix-huit membres, la plupart hautement
spécialisés et reconnus dans la discipline de l’archéologie
subaquatique, avait reçu comme premier mandat de développer
une charte dédiée à la bonne gestion du patrimoine culturel
subaquatique. Le texte conçu par l’ICUCH fut adopté en
1996 lors de l’Assemblée Générale de l’ICOMOS à Soia,
en Bulgarie. Ce dossier, conçu pour servir de guide et de
fondement sur le plan opérationnel pour la rédaction du texte
Foreword viii
de la future convention de l’UNESCO, est connu depuis
comme la Charte de l’ICOMOS sur le patrimoine culturel
subaquatique.
Cette charte de l’ICOMOS connut un tel succès lors des
délibérations tenues pendant quatre ans à l’UNESCO pour
développer un texte de convention internationale qu’elle y fut
incorporée presque intégralement en annexe. Cette annexecharte fait maintenant partie intégrale de la Convention.
Plusieurs pays inluents n’ont pas hésité à déclarer que la
charte de l’ICOMOS avait constitué l’âme et le cœur de
la dite convention et que, sans ce texte, il n’y aurait pas
eu de convention. Elle fut appuyée unanimement par une
assemblée pourtant partiellement divisée sur le texte même
de la Convention, texte plutôt juridique. Tous ces pays
s’engageaient en retour à la faire appliquer.
L’ICOMOS est désormais ier de constater que sa Charte pour
la protection du patrimoine culturel subaquatique, devenue
l’Annexe de cette convention de 2001, est mise en application
partiellement ou totalement dans nombre de pays, incluant de
grands pays maritimes opposés à certains aspects du contenu
juridique. Beaucoup de ces derniers s’étaient abstenus de
voter en faveur de la nouvelle convention. Même dans des
pays fortement en faveur de la Convention qui, comme le
Canada, sont reconnus pour leur gestion des biens culturels
submergés, cette Annexe est devenue un atout majeur qui
facilite et permet d’uniformiser la gestion et la protection,
avant même que la convention y soit ratiiée. De ce fait, ces
pays appliquant l’Annexe appliquent l’essentiel de la dite
convention.
Il n’est pas surprenant que, comme la dite tardive convention
et comme la naissance récente du comité ICUCH, ce
premier volume dédié au Patrimoine culturel subaquatique
apparaisse tardivement dans cette collection du Patrimoine
en Péril. Il était temps et important pour l’ICOMOS et, sans
aucun doute pour l’UNESCO, qu’une telle publication soit
produite et vienne faire connaître et comprendre la nature et
les problèmes de ce patrimoine culturel à travers le monde.
L’ICOMOS est ier de cette première tentative et espère que
d’autres suivront pour assurer un rattrapage longuement
attendu. Nous espérons aussi que ce texte servira à éveiller nos
Comités Nationaux et leur permettra de mieux comprendre
et mieux supporter les efforts de ceux et celles qui luttent
dans leurs pays respectifs pour protéger, gérer et mettre en
valeur cette grande composante menacée de notre patrimoine
commun.
ix Foreword
Prólogo
Michael Petzet
Presidente
ICOMOS Internacional
Durante la adopción en noviembre 2001 por la Asamblea
General de la UNESCO del texto de la nueva Convención
sobre la protección del Patrimonio cultural subacuático,
nadie esperaba enfrentar una tarea tan difícil para explicar
y promover la ratiicación de esta convención tan ventajosa
para los países marítimos y ribereños. De hecho, ICOMOS
y la UNESCO volvieron a experimentar la ignorancia y
desconianza que el mar ha suscitado en los hombres en
el curso del tiempo. Las profundidades de este universo
misterioso que cubre cuatro quintos de la supericie de
nuestro planeta han sido accesibles y fueron conquistadas
sólo muy recientemente, varios decenios después de la
conquista del espacio. Sin embargo, ese inmenso espacio
de nuestro universo había servido de vía de comunicación
y de transporte desde hace milenios y había permitido que
el hombre y sus múltiples civilizaciones se desarrollaran.
Diseminados y sumergidos en el fondo de los océanos,
ríos y lagos se encuentran restos únicos de civilizaciones
desaparecidas, incluyendo en particular los navíos hundidos,
estos remanentes patrimoniales que jalonan el fondo.
Tal como lo indicara el gran historiador marítimo Michel
Mollat de Jordania, los historiadores han ignorado durante
demasiado tiempo el mar, sus pescadores y sus marinos.
Lo mismo ha ocurrido con los organismos internacionales
como las Naciones Unidas, la UNESCO y el ICOMOS. La
convención internacional de la ONU sobre los derechos del
mar se produjo tardíamente en 1982, y , casi veinti años
más tarde, la convención sobre la protección del patrimonio
cultural sumergido fue una de las últimas adoptadas por la
UNESCO, en noviembre de 2001. En in, fue necesario
esperar casi veinticinco años después de su fundación, en
1991, para que ICOMOS viera la creación de un comité
cientíico internacional dedicado a la protección y la gestión
de los bienes culturales subacuáticos (ICUCH).
Este nuevo comité cientíico fundado en Australia y formado
inicialmente por dieciocho miembros, la mayor parte
altamente especializados y reconocidos en la disciplina de
la arqueología subacuática, recibió como primer mandato
redactar una Carta dedicada a la buena gestión del patrimonio
cultural subacuático. El texto concebido por el Comité fue
adoptado en 1996 durante la Asamblea General de ICOMOS
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
en Sofía, Bulgaria. Ese documento, concebido como guía y
fundamento en el plano operativo para la redacción del texto
de la futura convención de la UNESCO, se conoce como la
Carta de ICOMOS sobre el patrimonio cultural subacuático.
Fue tal el éxito de dicha Carta de ICOMOS, en las
deliberaciones sostenidas durante cuatro años en la UNESCO
para elaborar un texto de convención internacional, que
fue incorporada casi integralmente en forma de anexo.
Ese Anexo-Carta es ahora parte integral de la Convención.
Muchos países inluyentes no han demorado en declarar que
la Carta de ICOMOS constituye el alma y el corazón de dicha
convención y que, sin ese texto, no habría sido posible la
convención. Fue apoyada unánimemente por una asamblea
que estuvo, no obstante, parcialmente dividida sobre el texto
mismo de la Convención, texto más bien jurídico. Todos esos
países se comprometieron a su vez a hacerla aplicar.
ICOMOS está orgulloso de constatar que su Carta sobre la
protección del patrimonio cultural subacuático, convertida en
el Anexo de esta convención de 2001, se aplique parcial o
totalmente en numerosos países, incluyendo grandes países
marítimos opuestos a ciertos aspectos jurídicos del contenido.
Muchos de estos últimos países se habían abstenido de votar
a favor de la nueva convención. Incluso en los países que
apoyaban decididamente la Convención que, como Canadá,
son reconocidos por su gestión de los bienes culturales
sumergidos, ese Anexo se convirtió en un gran instrumento
que facilita y permite uniformizar la gestión y la protección,
antes que la convención sea ratiicada. Por eso, los países
que aplican el Anexo aplican lo esencial de dicha convenci
ón.
No resulta sorprendente que, al igual que la convención y la
reciente creación del ICUCH, este primer volumen dedicado
al Patrimonio cultural subacuático haya tardado tanto en
aparece en esta colección del Patrimonio en Peligro. Esta
esperada publicación, tan importante para ICOMOS y
UNESCO, permitirá conocer y comprender la naturaleza y
los problemas de ese patrimonio cultural a través del mundo.
ICOMOS se enorgullece de esta primera iniciativa y espera
que otras sigan para asegurar una recuperación largamente
esperada. Nosotros esperamos también que este texto sirva
para despertar a nuestros comités nacionales y les permita
comprender mejor y apoyar más los esfuerzos de quienes
luchan en sus países respectivos para proteger, manejar
y valorizar este gran componente amenazado de nuestro
patrimonio común.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Introduction: Mankind, and at Times Nature, are the
True Risks to Underwater Cultural Heritage
Robert Grenier
President
ICUCH
The ICOMOS International Scientiic Committee on the
Underwater Cultural Heritage (ICUCH) was involved from
the very beginning in the tough four-year battle which took
place at UNESCO, in ive week-long sessions from 1998 to
2001, to draft the text of a convention for the protection of
this cultural heritage. From the outset of these confrontations,
which pitted the key maritime stakeholders against each
other, ICUCH realised that the major challenge went
beyond reconciling these interests, often underlying and not
articulated. The challenge lay in dealing with the profound
ignorance of what constitutes the underwater cultural
heritage, the threats it faces and the solutions available to
protect it, as well as the measures that could be taken to
ensure an appropriate legal framework to facilitate the work
of those countries and stakeholders wishing to put in place
such systems of protection. The discussion had to be freed
from the stereotypes linked to concepts and practices on dry
land and from the romantic clichés fostered by comic strips,
literature or cinema which has nurtured us with archetypes
as extravagant as the Titanic or even the image of Red
Rackham’s treasure, in the Tintin series.
First and foremost, it was necessary to gain acceptance of
the idea that the underwater cultural heritage is part of
the universal heritage of humanity, just as signiicant and
deserving the same protection as the cultural heritage found
on dry land, and that it was necessary to liberate this heritage
from the age-old tradition of “irst-come, irst-served”
salvaging practice. Historic wrecks had to cease being viewed
as sources of “supply” for the coastal populations and, over
the last few decades, for divers and enterprises equipped
to harvest these collections of cultural objects available to
anybody on the marine loors. We had to transform the idea
that this heritage has to be saved from the destructive effects
of time and the elements, which may be true occasionally,
by raising awareness of the fact that mankind is the real
enemy, with our diving, dredging and powerful construction
equipment, motivated by inancial gain, the most powerful
opponent of cultural heritage. Mankind is the true threat to
underwater cultural heritage, but, equipped with the 2001
Convention and its Annex, we can also be its protector and
saviour. We are now able to protect and to save this common
heritage of humanity from ourselves and sometimes from
nature.
The Concept of Risk at the Heart of the Problem
No concept is more fundamentally appropriate and associated
with underwater cultural heritage than that of risk. Of
course, for several years now, the ICOMOS Heritage at Risk
publication series has eloquently demonstrated the nature
and extent of the dangers that threaten cultural monuments
Introduction x
and sites around the world. However, in general, these
monuments and sites have the advantage of being accessible
and visible, of having an identiiable location, which allows
the damages caused by mankind or by the natural elements to
be detected, at least most of the time. The destruction of the
giant Buddhas of Bamiyan in Afghanistan rapidly made the
headlines in the international media. It was the same for the
destruction caused by the force of nature in the city of New
Orleans in 2005. Under the sea, irreplaceable sites can be
destroyed by acts of man or nature without anyone knowing.
How many historic wrecks were destroyed by the monstrous
tsunami in December 2004 or by the forces unleashed by
Hurricane Katrina on the Louisiana coast? We will probably
never know. The same applies to the damages caused by
mankind, equipped with deep-sea diving suits, with dredges
or with mechanical equipment. On dry land, such actions
would leave traces and be observed by witnesses, possibly
giving rise to a beneicial public outcry. Underwater, almost
anything can happen unnoticed.
The risks endangering underwater cultural heritage sites are
multiplied by the widespread absence of protective legislation,
which has, on the other hand, been generally enacted for dry
land sites in most countries. Surprisingly, some countries
renowned for the protection and proper management of their
cultural heritage never had, and still do not have, national
legislation to protect their underwater cultural heritage: this
has been the case, until now, of a country such as Canada,
equipped with a law on salvaging, which could not be more
anti-cultural as it provides legal protection to “salvagers” who
destroy archaeological sites. In some sense, such a situation
is worse than a total absence of regulative legislation. Other
counties, having enacted adequate laws to protect their
underwater cultural heritage, lack the capacity to implement
these or the political will to do so.
For decades, commercial enterprises or treasure hunters have
experienced widespread success along the following rational:
“historic wrecks are at risk, threatened by the forces of nature
and by time, there are many of them and time is pressing.
Archaeologists are not available in suficient number, nor do
they have the time, nor the technical and inancial means to
save these wrecks, and we have saved more wrecks than all of
the archaeologists put together.” This argument has succeeded
in convincing many politicians worldwide to the detriment of
the cultural heritage of their respective countries. The reality
is completely different:
A) In general, historic wrecks, after several years or decades
of rapid initial deterioration, gradually reach a stabilised state
of conservation that will last for centuries, and in some cases,
for millennia, as shown by Mediterranean wrecks many
thousands of years old or by North American wrecks dating
from four or ive centuries ago. One only has to point out
the well-conserved Greek ship which sank 2300 years ago
near Kyrenia, Cyprus, or the four Basque whaling ships sunk
close to 500 years ago in the port of Red Bay, in Labrador.
xi Introduction
Other examples include the Wasa; in Stockholm, close to
400 years old; the Mary Rose in England, almost 500 years
old, etc. Although the sea initially damages the ships, it then
little by little becomes the protector of its prey. A currently
famous case is that of the Sussex, sunk off Gibraltar in 1694
in thousands of meters of water. At this depth, this incredibly
valuable English wreck was in no danger except from the
advanced technology used by the contractors involved in
its salvage, who should never have received the necessary
permits.
B) An inventory of all the wrecks who have been subject to
excavation or salvage since the invention of the aqualung
(autonomous deep-sea diving suit) half a century ago
demonstrates that no historic wreck has ever been saved
by commercial contractors or treasure hunters; only
archaeologists have succeeded in this task. At the very most,
treasure hunters have “saved” objects of commercial value
at the cost of the destruction of the archaeological context,
which is the real danger. These people exploit historic wrecks
as if they were mines of precious metals. The countries that
compromise with them, attracted by the promise of receiving
10% and even up to 50% of the spoils, in fact, recuperate
only a minimal part of the historic value of the wreck, as
90 to 95 % of this value is destroyed in most cases. These
wreck salvagers are in fact like proverbial wolves guarding
the lock. Why not conserve 100% of what belongs to the
nation?
It is therefore not surprising that the 2001 Convention and its
Annex are based above all upon the elimination of the law
of salvage and preventing the commercial exploitation of the
underwater cultural heritage, both “incompatible with the
protection of the underwater heritage.” If it were necessary
to keep only a single article of this Convention, it is clear
that article 2.2 and rule 2 of the Annex, whom together form
a single entity, would sufice to eliminate the fundamental
problem, the allure of inancial gain, source of all of the
threats posed to the underwater cultural heritage. The 32
papers, brought together in this publication, illustrate many
examples of underwater historic sites endangered throughout
the world, whether by humans acting directly underwater, or
by the intrusion of our machines, devices and engineering
works, or by the forces of nature, or by a combination of
the two. For each case analysed, solutions to mitigate the
effects are presented, respecting the cultural resource and
its conservation, in conformity with the major elements of
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
the Convention. Several of the proposed solutions illustrate,
in fact, the principle of in situ conservation, whether it be
the case of the undersea museum of Louisbourg in Canada,
the William Salthouse in Australia or of Bell Island in
Newfoundland.
Other, more drastic, solutions are required when both the
natural elements and divers constitute a combined menace,
as is the case for the Elizabeth and Mary, sunk in 1690 on
the banks of the Saint Lawrence in Canada. This site is in
such shallow waters and so close to the shore that in situ
conservation was not an option, and a complete recovery
of the archaeological remains was the only viable solution.
The case of the wreck of a 16th-century small ore carrier sunk
in the Orio river in Basque Country is an extraordinary and
unique example of a simple, small coastal vessel smashed in
half by an immense metal pillar during the construction of
a highway bridge, who, nevertheless, was able to yield the
hitherto unknown secrets of its design and construction, and
provide a view of the great saga of the Basque iron and steel
industry at its apogee.
The following chapters also demonstrate that the solutions
are not unique to developed countries such as Australia,
the USA or the United Kingdom, but are also accessible to
countries such as Sri Lanka, Turks and Caicos, and Polynesia.
This publication allows the assessment and appreciation of
the lesser-known, but critical, aspects of this Convention of
2001. In particular, it discusses raising awareness among the
public, above all among the diving public, who can become
an essential ally, the importance of cooperation between lag
countries and coastal countries and the value of opening
up to reputable commercial enterprises such as those who
organise diving tours and who see in the protection and good
management of the underwater cultural heritage a method of
prolonging the life of the visited sites, their livelihood. It is
for this last reason that the text of the tour guide Rick Stanley
has been selected as the irst chapter. Finally, throughout
these articles, the reader will become aware of the importance
of training divers and the public, one of the great successes
among the efforts employed since autumn 2001 to promote
this Convention. Our main objective is to sensitize the
reader to this, all too often unrecognized and misunderstood,
reality of the underwater cultural heritage. We hope to make
each one of you our ally, if not an active participant, in the
activities undertaken to reduce the risks to the underwater
cultural heritage in your country, social environment and
sphere of activity.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Introduction : le vrai péril du patrimoine submergé :
Ce sont les hommes, parfois la nature
Robert Grenier
Président
ICUCH
Le Comité Scientiique International de l’ICOMOS pour la
protection du patrimoine culturel subaquatique (ICUCH) a
été associé dès la première heure à la dure bataille qui s’est
déroulée à l’UNESCO pendant quatre ans pour développer le
texte d’une Convention pour la protection du dit patrimoine,
cela au cours de 5 sessions d’une semaine chacune de 1998
à 2001. Dès le début de ces affrontements entre de grands
intérêts maritimes, l’ICUCH a réalisé que le déi majeur se
situait bien au-delà de la réconciliation de ces intérêts, souvent
sous-jacents et non dits. Le déi se situait dans l’ignorance
profonde de ce qu’était la réalité même du patrimoine
culturel subaquatique, de ce qui le menaçait, des solutions
qui s’offraient pour le protéger et des moyens à prendre
pour assurer un encadrement juridique propre à faciliter le
travail des pays et des intervenants intéressés à mettre en
place ces systèmes de protection. Il fallait se débarrasser de
stéréotypes liés aux concepts et réalités existant sur la terre,
des stéréotypes romantiques dont nous avaient nourris les
bandes dessinées, la littérature ou le cinéma qui nous avaient
imprégnés d’archétypes aussi extravagants que le Titanic ou
même que l’image du Trésor de Rackam le Rouge.
Il fallait avant tout faire accepter l’idée que le patrimoine
culturel submergé était un patrimoine universel de
l’humanité, tout aussi important, qui méritait la même
protection que le patrimoine culturel sur terre, qu’il fallait
le libérer des traditions millénaires de la loi du sauvetage,
du premier arrivé, premier servi. Les épaves patrimoniales
devaient cesser d’être des sources d’approvisionnement pour
les habitants des côtes ou, depuis les dernières décennies,
pour les plongeurs et entrepreneurs équipés pour moissonner
ces récoltes d’objets culturels s’offrant au premier venu
sur les fonds marins. Nous devions modiier l’idée qu’il
fallait sauver ce patrimoine contre les effets destructeurs du
temps et des éléments, ce qui est une réalité à l’occasion, et
plutôt faire prendre conscience que l’homme est le véritable
ennemi avec son équipement de plongée, avec ses dragues,
ses puissants équipements de construction, motivé par ce
puissant adversaire du patrimoine culturel qu’est l’appât du
gain. Le péril véritable, c’est l’homme. C’est aussi l’homme
qui peut être le protecteur, le sauveur, équipé maintenant de
cette Convention de 2001 et de son Annexe. Il est désormais
en mesure de protéger et de sauver ce patrimoine commun de
l’humanité contre lui-même et parfois contre la nature.
Notion de péril au cœur même du problème
Aucune notion n’est plus profondément appropriée et associée
au patrimoine culturel submergé que la notion de péril. Bien
sûr, la collection de l’ICOMOS sur le Patrimoine en Péril
démontre de façon éloquente, depuis des années, la nature et
l’étendue de ces dangers qui menacent les monuments et sites
Introduction xii
culturels à travers le monde. Mais ces sites et monuments ont
en général l’avantage d’être accessibles et visibles, d’avoir
une adresse quelque part, de telle sorte que tout dommage
causé par l’homme ou par les éléments naturels est décelable
la plupart du temps. La destruction du Bouddha géant du site
Bamiyan d’Afghanistan a rapidement fait la une des médias
internationaux. Il en fut de même pour la destruction par les
forces naturelles de la ville de la Nouvelle-Orléans en 2005.
Sous la mer, des sites irremplaçables peuvent être détruits
par l’action des hommes ou par l’action des forces de la
nature sans que personne ne le sache. Combien d’épaves
patrimoniales ont été détruites par le Tsunami monstrueux de
décembre 2004 ou par les forces déchaînées par l’ouragan
Katrina sur les côtes de la Louisiane ? Nous ne le saurons
probablement jamais. Il en va de même pour les dommages
causés par l’homme muni de scaphandre ou équipé de
dragues ou d’équipements mécaniques. Sur terre, de telles
opérations auraient des témoins et pourraient soulever un
tollé bénéique. Sous l’eau, presque tout passe inaperçu.
Le péril menaçant les biens culturels submergés est décuplé
par l’absence très répandue de législation protectrice,
législation généralement présente sur terre dans la plupart des
pays. Étonnamment, des pays renommés pour la protection
et la bonne gestion de leur patrimoine culturel n’ont jamais
eu et n’ont toujours pas de législation nationale pour
protéger leur patrimoine culturel submergé. C’est le cas
jusqu’ici d’un pays comme le Canada, doté de la loi sur le
sauvetage, une loi on ne peut plus anti-culturelle qui permet
au « sauveteur » de détruire des sites archéologiques tout en
étant protégé par la loi. Cette situation est pire en un sens
que l’absence totale de loi. D’autres pays munis de lois
adéquates pour protéger leur patrimoine culturel submergé
sont d’autre part dépourvus de capacité d’application ou de
la volonté politique de le faire.
Depuis des décennies, les entreprises commerciales ou les
chercheurs de trésors connaissent un succès généralisé avec
le raisonnement suivant : « les épaves patrimoniales sont en
danger, menacées par les forces de la nature et du temps,
elles sont nombreuses et le temps presse (il y a péril) ; les
archéologues n’ont ni le nombre, ni le temps, ni les moyens
techniques et inanciers pour sauver ces épaves, et nous
avons sauvé plus d’épaves que tous les archéologues réunis
». Ce discours réussit à convaincre beaucoup de politiciens
dans le monde au détriment du patrimoine culturel de leurs
pays respectifs. La réalité est toute autre:
A) les épaves patrimoniales ont généralement acquis, après
quelques années ou décennies de détérioration initialement
assez rapide, un état de conservation graduellement stabilisé
qui va durer des siècles et dans certains cas des millénaires,
comme en témoignent des épaves multi-millénaires en
Méditerranée ou des épaves de quatre ou cinq siècles en
Amérique du Nord. Il sufit de citer le navire grec bien
conservé qui avait coulé il y a 2300 ans près de Kyrenia, à
Chypres, ou les quatre navires baleiniers basques coulés il
y a près de 500 ans dans le port de Red Bay au Labrador.
xiii Introduction
Ajoutons le Wasa à Stockholm, près de 400 ans ; le Mary
Rose en Angleterre, presque 500 ans etc. Si la mer les abîme
initialement, elle se transforme petit à petit en protectrice de
ses proies. Un cas célèbre en cours est celui du Sussex, au
large de Gibraltar, coulé en 1694 à des milliers de mètres
de profondeur. A cette profondeur, aucun péril ne menace
ce navire anglais contenant une richesse inouïe, si ce n’est
la haute technologie des entrepreneurs impliqués dans son
sauvetage et qui n’auraient jamais dû recevoir de permis.
B) un inventaire des épaves qui ont fait l’objet de fouilles
ou de sauvetage depuis l’invention du scaphandre
autonome il y plus d’un demi siècle démontre qu’aucune
épave patrimoniale n’a été sauvée par des entrepreneurs
commerciaux ou chercheurs de trésors, seuls les archéologues
ont réussi cette entreprise. Tout au plus, les chercheurs de
trésors ont-ils « sauvé » les objets de valeur commerciale
au prix de la destruction du contexte archéologique, ce qui
constitue le véritable péril. Ces gens exploitent les épaves
patrimoniales comme des mines de métaux précieux. Les
pays qui transigent avec eux avec la promesse de recevoir
une part du butin de 10% ou même 50%, ne récupèrent en
fait qu’une très minime partie de la valeur patrimoniale,
90 à 95% de cette valeur étant détruite la plupart du temps.
Ces sauveurs d’épaves sont en fait les loups qui gardent
la bergerie. Pourquoi ne pas conserver 100% de ce qui
appartient à la nation ?
Il n’est pas étonnant que la Convention de 2001 et son
Annexe soient fondées avant tout sur l’élimination de la loi
du sauvetage et de l’exploitation commerciale du patrimoine
culturel submergé, « incompatibles avec la protection du
patrimoine submergé ». S’il ne fallait conserver qu’un
seul article de cette Convention, il est clair que l’Article 2.2
et la règle 2 de l’Annexe, qui forment un tout, sufiraient
à éliminer le problème fondamental, soi l’appât du gain
monétaire, source de tous les périls pour le patrimoine
culturel subaquatique. Ce recueil de 32 textes offre autant
d’exemples de sites patrimoniaux menacés de par le monde,
soit par l’action de l’homme agissant directement sous
l’eau ou par l’entremise de ses machines, appareils ou de ses
travaux de génie, soit par l’action des forces de la nature, soit
par les forces combinées des deux. Pour chaque cas analysé,
des solutions d’atténuation sont présentées, respectueuses
de la ressource et de sa conservation, en conformité avec
des éléments majeurs de la Convention. Plusieurs solutions
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
présentées sont en fait une illustration du principe de la
conservation in situ, que ce soit le cas du musée sous la mer
de Louisbourg au Canada ou le cas du William Salthouse en
Australie ou le cas de Bell Island à Terre-Neuve.
D’autres solutions plus draconiennes sont requises quand les
éléments et les plongeurs constituent une menace conjointe :
c’est le cas du site du Elizabeth and Mary, coulé en 1690,
sur les rives du Saint-Laurent au Canada, site si peu profond
et si près du rivage que la conservation in situ n’y était
pas une option, où une récupération complète des vestiges
archéologiques s’avérait la seule solution viable. Le cas
de l’épave du petit caboteur minéralier du seizième siècle
coulé dans la rivière Orio au pays Basque est un exemple
extraordinaire et unique d’un simple petit navire côtier
défoncé en son centre par l’immense pilier de métal d’un
pont d’autoroute et qui, malgré tout, a pu livrer les secrets
inédits de sa conception et de sa construction, et ouvrir une
fenêtre sur la grande aventure de la sidérurgie basque à
l’époque de son apogée. Les chapitres qui suivent montrent
aussi que ces solutions ne sont pas l’unique apanage des
pays nantis comme l’Australie, les USA ou l’Angleterre,
mais qu’elles sont aussi à la portée de pays comme le Sri
Lanka, Turks et Caicos, la Polynésie. La présente publication
permettra d’apprécier des aspects moins connus mais tout
aussi cruciaux de cette Convention de 2001. Il s’agit de
la sensibilisation du public et surtout du public plongeur
qui peut devenir un allié incontournable, de la force de la
collaboration entre les pays du pavillon et les pays côtiers,
de l’ouverture aux entreprises commerciales de bon aloi
comme celles qui organisent des tournées de plongée et
qui voient dans la protection et la bonne gestion des biens
culturels submergés une façon de prolonger la vie des sites
de visite, leur gagne-pain. C’est pour cette dernière raison
que le texte de l’opérateur de tournées Rick Stanley a été
sélectionné comme premier chapitre. Finalement, tout au
long de ces articles, le lecteur réalisera l’importance de la
formation des plongeurs et du public, un des grands succès
des efforts déployés depuis l’automne 2001 pour promouvoir
cette Convention. Avant tout, nous voulons sensibiliser le
lecteur à cette réalité trop souvent méconnue et mal comprise
du patrimoine culturel submergé et espérons faire de chaque
lecteur un allié, sinon un collaborateur actif pour participer
aux entreprises d’atténuation dans son pays, dans son milieu
et sa sphère d’activité.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Introducción: El Verdadero Peligro del Patrimonio Subacuático
son los Hombres y, a veces, la Naturaleza
Robert Grenier
Presidente
ICUCH
El Comité Cientíico Internacional de ICOMOS para la
Protección del Patrimonio Cultural Subacuático (ICUCH) ha
estado asociado desde el principio a la dura batalla de cuatro
años que se ha librado en la UNESCO para elaborar el texto
de una Convención para proteger dicho patrimonio, esto es,
durante 5 sesiones de una semana de duración cada una entre
1998 y 2001. Desde el principio de ese combate entre los
grandes intereses marítimos, el ICUCH se dio cuenta de que
el principal desafío estaba mucho más allá de la conciliación
de esos intereses, a menudo subyacentes y no manifestados.
El desafío residía en la ignorancia profunda de lo que era la
propia realidad del patrimonio cultural subacuático, de lo que
lo amenazaba, de las soluciones existentes para protegerlo y
de las medidas que debían adoptarse para garantizar un marco
jurídico que facilitara el trabajo de los países y las partes
interesadas para establecer esos sistemas de protección. Era
necesario deshacerse de los estereotipos relacionados con
los conceptos y realidades existentes, de los estereotipos
románticos inculcados por las revistas de historietas, la
literatura o el cine, que nos habían imbuido de arquetipos tan
extravagantes como el Titanic o incluso la imagen del Tesoro
de Rackam el Rojo.
Ante todo, era necesario aceptar la idea de que el patrimonio
cultural subacuático era un patrimonio universal de la
humanidad, igual de importante y merecedor de la misma
protección que el patrimonio cultural situado en tierra irme,
que era necesario liberarlo de las tradiciones milenarias
de la ley sobre el salvamento, del principio del primero
que llega es el primero que se lo queda. Los restos de
naufragios patrimoniales tenían que dejar de ser fuentes de
aprovisionamiento para los habitantes de las costas o, en los
últimos decenios, para los buzos y empresarios equipados para
recoger esas cosechas de objetos culturales que se ofrecían al
primero en llegar al fondo marino. Teníamos que cambiar la
idea según la cual era necesario salvar ese patrimonio de los
efectos destructores del tiempo y los elementos, lo que ocurre
raramente, y, en su lugar, concienciar sobre el hecho de que
el verdadero enemigo de ese patrimonio subacuático es el ser
humano, con su equipo de inmersión, con sus dragas, con sus
potentes equipos de construcción, motivado por ese poderoso
enemigo del patrimonio cultural que es el afán de lucro, la
avaricia. El verdadero peligro es el hombre. No obstante,
es también el hombre quien puede erigirse en el protector,
el salvador, dotado ahora de esta Convención de 2001 y de
su Anexo. En lo sucesivo, está en condiciones de proteger y
salvar ese patrimonio común de la humanidad de sí mismo y,
en ocasiones, de la naturaleza.
Noción de peligro en pleno centro del problema
No hay ninguna noción que mejor se adecúe y más
estrechamente se asocie al patrimonio cultural subacuático
Introduction xiv
que la del peligro. Por supuesto, la colección de informes de
ICOMOS sobre el Patrimonio en Peligro demuestra de forma
elocuente desde hace años la naturaleza y alcance de los
peligros que amenazan los monumentos y sitios culturales en
todo el mundo. No obstante, esos sitios y monumentos suelen
tener la ventaja de ser accesibles y visibles, de contar con una
dirección en algún lugar, de modo que la mayoría de las veces
es posible detectar cualquier daño provocado por el hombre o
por los elementos naturales. La destrucción del Buda gigante
del sitio de Bamiyan en Afganistán acaparó con rapidez los
titulares de la prensa internacional. Lo mismo ocurrió con la
destrucción por las fuerzas naturales de la ciudad de Nueva
Orleans en 2005. Bajo el mar, la acción de los hombres o de las
fuerzas de la naturaleza puede destruir sitios irremplazables
sin que nadie lo sepa. ¿Cuántos restos de buques naufragados
patrimoniales han sido destruidos por el monstruoso tsunami
de diciembre de 2004 o por las fuerzas desencadenadas por
el huracán Katrina en las costas de Luisiana? Probablemente
nunca lo sabremos. Lo mismo ocurre con los daños causados
por los hombres y sus escafandras, sus dragas o sus equipos
mecánicos. En tierra irme, ese tipo de operaciones tendrían
testigos y podrían despertar protestas con efectos positivos.
Bajo el agua, prácticamente todo pasa desapercibido.
El peligro que amenaza los bienes culturales sumergidos se
ve multiplicado por la ausencia generalizada de legislación
que proteja ese tipo de patrimonio, legislación, por otra parte,
que sí suele existir para el patrimonio sobre tierra irme en
la mayoría de los países. Sorprende constatar que países
reputados por la protección y la buena gestión de su patrimonio
cultural nunca han tenido y siguen sin tener hoy día leyes
nacionales para proteger su patrimonio cultural subacuático.
Este es el caso de un país como Canadá, que cuenta con
una ley sobre el salvamento, totalmente anticultural, que
permite al «salvador» destruir sitios arqueológicos y contar
al mismo tiempo con la protección de la ley. Esta situación es
peor en cierto sentido que si no existiera ninguna ley. Otros
países que sí que cuentan con leyes adecuadas para proteger
el patrimonio cultural subacuático se ven, por otra parte,
desprovistos de la capacidad de aplicación o de la voluntad
política.
Hace décadas que las empresas comerciales o los buscadores
de tesoros tienen un éxito generalizado gracias al siguiente
razonamiento: «los restos de naufragios patrimoniales están
en peligro ya que se ven amenazados por las fuerzas de la
naturaleza y del tiempo; son muy numerosos y el tiempo
apremia (hay peligro); los arqueólogos no tienen ni los
recursos humanos, ni el tiempo, ni los medios técnicos ni
inancieros para salvar esos restos de naufragios, y nosotros
hemos salvado más restos de naufragios que todos los
arqueólogos juntos». Este razonamiento logra convencer a
muchos políticos del mundo, en detrimento del patrimonio
cultural de sus respectivos países. La realidad es muy
diferente:
A) Por un lado, cabe señalar que por lo general, los restos
xv Introduction
de naufragios patrimoniales han adquirido, después de varios
años, decenios o más tiempo de deterioro inicialmente bastante
rápido, un estado de conservación gradualmente estabilizado
que va a durar siglos y en ciertos casos milenios, tal como
lo demuestran los restos de naufragios multimilenarios del
Mediterráneo o los restos de naufragios de hace cuatro o
cinco siglos de América del Norte. Baste con citar el barco
griego bien conservado, que se hundió hace 2300 años cerca
de Kyrenia, en Chipre, o los cuatro buques balleneros vascos
hundidos hace casi quinientos años en el puerto de Red
Bay en Labrador. Añadamos a ello el Wasa en Estocolmo,
de cerca de 400 años y el Mary Rose en Inglaterra, con casi
500 años, entre otros. El mar causa deterioro inicialmente,
pero luego, poco a poco, se transforma en protector de sus
presas. Un caso célebre en curso es el del Sussex, en la
costa de Gibraltar, hundido en 1694, a miles de metros de
profundidad. A esa profundidad, no hay ningún peligro que
amenace ese buque inglés que contiene una increíble riqueza,
salvo la alta tecnología de los empresarios que participan en
su salvamento y a los que nunca se les deberían haber dado
permiso.
B) Por otro lado, un inventario de los restos de naufragios
que han sido objeto de excavaciones o de salvamento desde
la invención de la escafandra autónoma hace más de medio
siglo demuestra que ningún resto de naufragio patrimonial
ha sido salvado por empresarios comerciales o buscadores
de tesoros; son sólo los arqueólogos quienes lo han logrado.
Como mucho, lo que han «salvado» los buscadores de tesoros
son los objetos de valor comercial a cambio de la destrucción
del contexto arqueológico, que es lo que constituye el
verdadero peligro. Esas personas explotan los restos de
naufragios patrimoniales como si se tratara de minas de
metales preciosos. Los países que se muestran transigentes
con ellos a cambio de la promesa de recibir parte del botín, el
10% o incluso el 50%, no recuperan en realidad más que una
muy mínima parte del valor patrimonial; en la mayoría de los
casos se destruye el 90 a 95% de ese valor. Esos «salvadores»
de restos de naufragios son en realidad los lobos que guardan
al rebaño. ¿Por qué no conservar 100% de lo que nos
pertenece?
No resulta sorprendente que la Convención de 2001 y su
Anexo se basen ante todo en la eliminación de la ley del
salvamento y de la explotación comercial del patrimonio
cultural subacuático, que son «incompatibles con la protección
del patrimonio subacuático». Si hubiera que mantener un solo
artículo de esa Convención, está claro que el artículo 2.2 y la
norma 2 del Anexo, que forman un todo, serían suicientes
para solucionar el problema fundamental, esto es, el afán de
lucro, fuente de todos los peligros para el patrimonio cultural
subacuático. Este conjunto de 32 textos ofrece ejemplos de
sitios patrimoniales amenazados en distintas partes del mundo,
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
ya sea por la acción del hombre que actúa directamente bajo
el agua o por medio de sus máquinas, aparatos o trabajos
de ingeniería, por la acción de las fuerzas de la naturaleza o
por las fuerzas combinadas de la acción del hombre y de la
naturaleza. Para cada caso analizado, se presentan soluciones
de mitigación que respetan los recursos y su conservación, de
conformidad con los principales elementos de la Convención.
Varias de las soluciones presentadas ilustran, de hecho, el
principio de la conservación in situ, ya se trate del museo
bajo el mar de Louisbourg en Canadá, del William Salthouse
en Australia o de Bell Island en Terranova.
Se necesitan otras soluciones más drásticas cuando los
elementos y los buzos constituyen una amenaza conjunta: es
el caso del sitio del Elizabeth and Mary, hundido en 1690,
a orillas del San Lorenzo en Canadá, un lugar tan poco
profundo y tan cercano a la ribera que la conservación in situ
no era posible, siendo la única solución viable la recuperación
completa de los restos arqueológicos. El caso de los restos
del naufragio del pequeño buque de cabotaje mineralero
del siglo XVI hundido en el río Orio en el País Vasco es un
ejemplo extraordinario y único de un simple pequeño barco
costero destrozado en el centro por el inmenso pilar de metal
de un puente de autopista que, a pesar de todo, ha podido
desvelar los secretos inéditos de su diseño y construcción,
y nos ha permitido entrever lo que fue la gran aventura de
la siderurgia vasca en su época de su apogeo. Los capítulos
de esta publicación muestran también que esas soluciones
no son monopolio exclusivo de los países más ricos como
Australia, Estados Unidos o Inglaterra, sino que también
están al alcance de países como Sri Lanka, Turks y Caicos, y
Polinesia. La presente publicación permitirá apreciar aspectos
menos conocidos, aunque igual de importantes, de esta
Convención de 2001, esto es, la sensibilización del público y
sobre todo de la comunidad de buzos, que se convierte en un
aliado obligado, la fuerza de la cooperación entre los países
del pabellón y los países costeros, la apertura a las empresas
comerciales legítimas como las que organizan excursiones de
inmersión y que consideran la protección y la buena gestión
de los bienes culturales sumergidos como una forma de
proteger a largo plazo los sitios de visita. Ésta es la razón por
la que se seleccionó el primer capítulo de Rick Stanley. Por
último, a medida que el lector vaya avanzando por el resto
de los artículos, se dará cuenta de la importancia que reviste
educar a los buzos y al público, uno de los grandes éxitos
de las actividades emprendidas desde el otoño de 2001 para
promover la Convención. Ante todo, queremos sensibilizar al
lector con la realidad, a menudo desconocida e incomprendida,
del patrimonio cultural subacuático, y coniamos en que cada
lector se convertirá en un aliado, un colaborador activo que
participará en los esfuerzos de mitigación en su país, en su
entorno y en su ámbito de actividad.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
ICOMOS/ICUCH xvi
The International Council on
Monuments and Sites
Le Conseil International
des Monuments et des Sites
The International Council on Monuments and Sites was
founded in 1965 in Warsaw (Poland), one year after the
signing of the International Charter on the Conservation and
Restoration of Monuments and Sites, known as the “Venice
Charter.”
Le Conseil International des Monuments et des Sites a
été fondé en 1965 à Varsovie, en Pologne, un an après la
signature de la Charte internationale sur la conservation et
la restauration des monuments et des sites, dite “Charte de
Venise.”
What is ICOMOS?
ICOMOS is an association of cultural heritage professionals
throughout the world, working for the conservation and
protection of monuments and sites – the only global nongovernmental organisation of its kind. It beneits from the
cross-disciplinary exchange of its members – architects,
archaeologists, art historians, engineers, historians, planners
— who foster improved heritage conservation standards and
techniques for all forms of cultural properties: buildings,
historic towns, cultural landscapes, archaeological sites, etc.
ICOMOS has established more than twenty-ive International
Scientiic Committees on various themes and issues related
to cultural heritage. These committees undertake research,
develop conservation theory; guidelines and charters, and
foster training for better heritage conservation in their
specialised ield.
ICOMOS is:
•
•
•
•
•
An international forum for discussion on heritage
conservation, via its website, Newsletter, Scientiic
Journal and at workshops, seminars and conferences,
including its triennial General Assembly;
A network of heritage practitioners, with National
Committees in over 120 countries, who share expertise
and experience directly or through International
Scientiic Committees;
A partnership working with national and international
authorities in issues and projects of heritage
conservation;
An advocate of international conventions and author of
many charters and guidelines regarded as “best practise”
for heritage conservation;
Oficially recognised as the advisory body to
UNESCO, actively contributing to the World Heritage
Committee and taking part in the implementation of the
Convention.
Interested professional working in cultural heritage may apply
for membership of ICOMOS to the National Committee in
their country – a list of all the National Committees and their
contacts in on the ICOMOS website. If you do not have a
National Committee in your country, you can contact the
ICOMOS International Secretariat.
Qu’est-ce que l’ICOMOS ?
L’ICOMOS est une association mondiale de professionnels
qui se consacre à la conservation et à la protection de sites du
patrimoine culturel. C’est la seule organisation internationale
non gouvernementale de ce type. Elle bénéicie des échanges
interdisciplinaires de ses membres qui comptent parmi eux des
architectes, des historiens, des archéologues, des historiens
de l’art, des ingénieurs et des urbanistes. Les membres de
l’ICOMOS concourent à l’amélioration de la préservation
du patrimoine, à la création de normes et de techniques pour
tous les types de biens du patrimoine culturel : bâtiments,
villes historiques, paysages culturels, sites archéologiques
etc.
L’ICOMOS a créé plus de vingt-cinq Comités Scientiiques
sur différents thèmes et questions du patrimoine culturel.
Ces Comités entreprennent des recherches, élaborent des
rélexions théoriques, des directives et des chartes sur la
conservation et encouragent la formation pour une meilleure
préservation du patrimoine dans les différentes spécialités.
L’ICOMOS est :
•
•
•
•
•
Un forum international d’échange autour de la
conservation du patrimoine via le site Internet, les
Nouvelles de l’ICOMOS, le Journal Scientiique, des
ateliers, des séminaires, des conférences et l’Assemblée
Générale triennale ;
Un réseau de praticiens du patrimoine qui partagent leurs
spécialités et leurs expériences, directement au sein de
leurs Comités Nationaux présents dans plus de 120 pays
ou au travers des Comités Scientiiques Internationaux ;
Un partenariat sur les questions et les projets de
conservation du patrimoine, en coopération avec les
autorités nationales et internationales ;
Un défenseur des conventions internationales et l’auteur
de nombreuses chartes et directives qui s’efforcent de
déinir les pratiques les meilleures pour la conservation
du patrimoine ;
L’organe consultatif oficiel de l’UNESCO en matière de
patrimoine cultural mondial. Il contribue activement au
travail du Comité du patrimoine mondial et à la mise en
œuvre de la Convention du patrimoine mondial.
Les professionnels intéressés, travaillant dans le domaine du
patrimoine culturel, peuvent faire une demande d’adhésion à
l’ICOMOS par l’intermédiaire de leur Comité National : une
liste des Comités Nationaux ainsi que leurs coordonnées sont
accessibles sur le site Internet de l’ICOMOS. S’il n’existe
pas de Comité dans votre pays, vous pouvez prendre contact
xvii ICOMOS/ICUCH
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
El Consejo Internacional
de Monumentos y Sitios
Que es el ICOMOS?
El Consejo Internacional de Monumentos y Sitios fue
fundado en 1965, en Varsovia, Polonia, un año después de
la irma de la Carta internacional sobre la conservación y
la restauración de monumentos y sitios, llamada “Carta de
Venecia”.
El ICOMOS es una asociación mundial de profesionales
que se dedica ala conservación y a la protección de sitios del
patrimonio cultural. Es la única organización internacional no
gubernamental de este tipo. Se beneicia de los intercambios
interdisciplinarios de sus miembros: arquitectos, historiadores,
arqueólogos, historiadores de arte, antropólogos, ingenieros
y urbanistas. Los miembros del ICOMOS contribuyen a
la mejora de la preservación del patrimonio, a la ceración
de normas y técnicas para todos los tipos de bienes del
patrimonio cultural: construcciones, ciudades históricas,
paisajes culturales, sitios arqueoógicos, etc.
El ICOMOS ha creado más de veinticinco Comités Cientíicos
sobre diferentes temas y cuestiones del patrimonio cultural.
Estos comités emprenden investigaciones, elaboran teorías,
directivas y cartas de conservación y estimulan la formación
para lograr una mejor conservación del patrimonio, en las
diferentes especializaciones.
El ICOMOS es:
•
Un foro internacional donde se discute sobre al
conservación del patrimonio- a través del sitio Internet,
del boletín , del diario cientíico, de talleres, seminarios,
conferencias, y de la asamblea general trienal;
•
Una red de expertos especializados que comparten
experiencias directamente desde sus respectivos Comités
Nacionales, presentes en más de 180 países, o a través de
los Comités Cientíicos Internacionales;
•
Una asociación sobre las cuestiones y los proyectos de
conservación del patrimonio, en cooperación con las
autoridades nacionales e internacionales;
•
Un defensor de los convenios internacionales y el
autor de numerosas cartas y directivas que tratan de
deinir las “mejores prácticas” para la conservación del
patrimonio;
•
El órganismo consultivo de la UNESCO en materia de
patrimonio cultural mundial. Contrubuye activamente al
trabajo del Comité del patrimonio mundial. El equipo de
la Secrtaría del ICOMOS y la comisión para el patrimonio
mundial del ICOMOS están encargados de evaluar las
propuestas de inscripción en la Lista del patrimonio
mundial, presentadas por los países irmantes.
Los profesionales interesados , que trabajan en el ámbito del
pateimonio cultural, pueden enviar una solicitud de adhesión
al ICOMOS por mediación de su Comité Nacional: se
puede acceder a las informaciones sobre todos los Comités
Nacionales en el sitio de Internet de ICOMOS. Si no hubiese
Comité Nacional en su país, puede contactar con la Secretaría
Internacional del ICOMOS para más información.
ICOMOS/ICUCH xviii
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
ICOMOS International Committee
on the Underwater Cultural Heritage (ICUCH)
Comité International de l’ICOMOS
pour la Protection du Patrimoine
Culturel Subaquatique (ICUCH)
Comité Internacional del ICOMOS
para la Protección del Patrimonio
Cultural Subacuático (ICUCH)
The ICOMOS International Committee
on the Underwater Cultural Heritage
(ICUCH) was founded in Australia
in 1991 by ICOMOS Australia. The
founding president was Graeme
Henderson, director of the Western
Australia Maritime Museum at
Fremantle.
Le Comité International de l’ICOMOS
pour la Protection du Patrimoine
Culturel Subaquatique (ICUCH) a été
fondé en 1991 en Australie par ICOMOS
Australie. Le président fondateur
fut Graeme Henderson, directeur du
Musée maritime de Western Australia
à Fremantle.
El Comité Internacional del ICOMOS
para la Protección del Patrimonio
Cultural Subacuático (ICUCH) fue
fundado en 1991 en Australia por
ICOMOS Australia. El Presidente
fundador fue Graeme Henderson,
director del Museo Marítimo de
Western Australia, en Fremantle.
The birth of the committee was
in reaction to the pressing needs
brought to light by the discovery
and subsequent exploitation of the
remains of the Titanic: it was now
evident that technologies capable of
working at great depth threatened both
known and unknown wrecks that, up
until recently, had been protected by
their inaccessibility. The concept of a
committee composed of international
experts in underwater archaeology
was thus born: this group of experts
from eighteen countries had, as a goal,
to assist ICOMOS International and
UNESCO in promoting the protection
and sound management of submerged
cultural resources as an important part
of humanity’s heritage.
La fondation de ce comité répondait
à un besoin pressant mis en lumière
par la découverte et l’exploitation
désordonnée qui s’ensuivit des vestiges
du Titanic : il semblait désormais évident
que les instruments technologiques
capables de travailler dans les grandes
profondeurs menaçaient les épaves
connues et inconnues jusque là
protégées par leur inaccessibilité. Le
concept d’un comité réunissant des
experts internationaux en archéologie
subaquatique était né : ce groupe
d’experts de dix-huit pays a pour mission
d’assister l’ICOMOS international et
l’UNESCO à promouvoir la protection
et la saine gestion des biens culturels
submergés en tant que partie importante
du patrimoine de l’humanité.
La creación de este Comité respondía
a una necesidad urgente puesta de
maniiesto por el descubri-miento y
explotación descontrolada de los restos
del Titanic: parecía evidente que los
desarrollos tecno-lógicos, permitiendo
trabajar a cualquier profundidad,
amenazarían los restos conocidos y
desconocidos, protegidos hasta el
momento por su inaccesibilidad. El
concepto de un comité que reuniera a
expertos inter-nacionales en arqueología
suba-cuática había nacido: este grupo
de expertos de dieciocho paises tiene
por misión asistir al ICOMOS Internacional y a la UNESCO a promover
la protección y la buena gestión de los
bienes culturales sumergidos como
parte importante del patrimonio de la
humanidad.
Since underwater archaeology is a
relatively new discipline, it is poorly
understood in many countries and is
often the object of false representations
which particularly threaten the less
well-to-do countries. These countries
are often solicited by supposedly
famous underwater archaeologists who
exploit a country’s lack of knowledge
of the ield. ICUCH’s mission is
to alleviate this lack of expertise
throughout the world by acting as
technical expert, by facilitating basic
training in underwater archaeology
and conservation of artefacts, and
inally by putting pressure on countries
or organisations that collaborate in
the destruction of submerged heritage.
The members of ICUCH are available
to all: countries, organisations and
individuals interested in the protection
and sound management of cultural
resources found underwater.
L’archéologie subaquatique étant une
discipline relativement récente, elle est
peu connue de nombreux pays et elle
fait souvent l’objet d’interprétations
fausses qui menacent en particulier
les pays peu fortunés. Ces pays sont
souvent sollicités par de supposés
archéologues subaquatiques de grand
renom qui exploitent leur manque de
connaissances sur le sujet. La mission
d’ l’ICUCH dans les diverses régions
du monde est de pallier cette carence
d’expertise en servant d’expert
technique, en facilitant la formation de
base en archéologie subaquatique et en
conservation des objets et inalement
en faisant pression sur les pays ou
organismes qui collaborent à cette
destruction du patrimoine submergé.
Les membres de l’ICUCH sont à la
disposition de tous pays, organismes et
individus intéressés par la protection et
par la bonne gestion des biens culturels
trouvés sous l’eau.
La arqueología subacuática al ser una
disciplina reciente, es aún desconocida
en algunos países y a menudo objeto de
falsas interpretaciones que amenazan en
particular a los países menos favorecidos.
Estos son a menudo solicitados por
supuestos arqueólogos subacuáticos
de gran renombre que explotan el
desconocimiento de esto países sobre
el tema. La misión del ICUCH en las
distintas regiones del mundo es paliar
esta carencia de expertos sirviendo
de consejero técnico, facilitando
información básica en arqueología
subacuática y en conservación de los
objetos, y inalmente presionando sobre
los paises u organismos que colaboran
en esta destrucción del patrimonio
sumergido. Los miembros del ICUCH
están a disposición de todos: países,
organismos y personas individuales
interesados en la protección y en la
buena gestión de los bienes cultu-rales
encontrados bajo el agua.
xix H@R
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Heritage at Risk
Patrimoine en Péril
Patrimonio en Peligro
The ICOMOS World Report on
Monuments and Sites in Danger
(Heritage at Risk) is published regularly
to help save our cultural heritage.
The Report is conceived not only as
a vehicle to share information among
professionals and colleagues, but also
to be distributed to the media, relevant
organisations, governments and other
stakeholders.
La Rapport mondial sur les monuments
et les sites en péril (Patrimoine en
péril), publié régulièrement, a pour
but de contribuer à la sauvegarde du
patrimoine culturel. Le Rapport se
veut, non seulement un outil pour
stimuler l’échange d’information parmi
les professionnels, mais aussi pour
atteindre les médias, les organisations
concernées, les gouvernements et autres
parties prenantes.
El Informe mundial sobre Monumentos
y sitios patrimoniales en peligro
(Patrimonio en peligro), publicado
regularmente, tiene como objetivo
contribuir a la salvaguarda del
patrimonio cultural. El informe
pretende ser no sólo un instrumento para
estimular el intercambio de información
entre los profesionales, sino también
una manera de llegar a los medios de
comunicaciñon, las organizaciones
competentes, los gobiernos y el resto
de los actores implicados.
The texts in this Special Edition of
Heritage at Risk will be available online
on the ICOMOS International website
(www.international.icomos.org)
in
the rubric Heritage at Risk. All texts
in this printed edition are presented in
English. In the event that the author
has submitted a version of their text in
their native or second language, these
versions also will be made available
online.
Les textes de cette édition spéciale de
Patrimoine en péril seront disponibles sur
le site web de l’ICOMOS International
(www.international.icomos.org) à la rubrique Heritage at Risk. Tous les textes
de la version imprimée sont présentés en
anglais. Dans le cas où l’auteur a soumis
une version de son texte dans sa langue
maternelle ou une seconde langue, ces
versions seront également disponible
sur le site.
Los textos de esta Edición Especial
de Patrimonio en peligro
estarán
disponibles en el sitio web de ICOMOS
Internacional (http://www.international.
icomos.org) en la sección Heritage at
Risk. Todos los textos de la edición
impresa están en inglés. En el caso de
que el autor haya presentado una versión
de su texto en su lengua materna o en
entro idioma, estas versiones también
estarán disponibles online.
Right: Orio IV - After the extraction, with the aide of
a suction dredger, of the pad of silt and sand of an
approximate thickness of 2m, the iron ore cargo that the
ship was transporting appeared
(Luis Mª Naya-INSUB)
It’s All About the ‘P’s!
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
It’s All About the ‘P’s!
Rick Stanley
President
Ocean Quest Inc
Canada
Rick is a member of the Steering Committee for Sustainable
Tourism with Hospitality Newfoundland & Labrador and an
advisor to Parks Canada on the subject of SCUBA Diving.
He is also a founder of Ocean Net, a non-proit organisation
with the goal ‘To Instil an Ocean Conservation Ethic.
UNESCO’s inluence reaches far beyond Newfoundland’s
Conception Bay – my home, my ofice and deinitely my
favourite place to be – and it’s safe to say that ‘little old me’
will never have the same impact upon the World. However,
I’d like to think that in this beautiful part of the planet
which most people have never heard of, we at Ocean Quest
contribute as best we can to some of the UNESCO ideals
by increasing awareness of the importance of safeguarding
our natural and cultural heritage. How do our activities help
address the threat to underwater cultural sites? Well, it’s all
about the ‘P’s!
Passion
Many good things are borne from necessity, but I irmly
believe it’s passion which truly inluences opinion and is
behind most successes. Growing up near the Ocean, like
all Newfoundlanders, I’ve always admired and respected
it. Watching icebergs loat by in spring, whales feeding in
summer or ships and ishing boats going about their business,
the sea held a fascination for me which was destined to
develop into much more. Taking the “plunge” and learning to
SCUBA dive made that fascination into a dream – a passion
to turn the amazing underwater world I’d just discovered
into a career opportunity, even a lifestyle. Whether beautiful
marine life or awe inspiring shipwrecks, what I saw under the
Atlantic waves was special, but so much of it was threatened
– mostly by lack of awareness of its fragility but, sadly, much
of the time by blatant disregard for its existence. That’s
where my passion came from – the urge to encourage others
to respect and care for the natural and historical wonders I’d
found beneath the sea on my own doorstep. The company
which emerged from the dream, Ocean Quest, is driven by
that passion – one which is shared by all its employees and
which I hope will sustain it for a long time yet.
Product
Without a product, there would be no business! The solution
was obvious – a dive charter business. I’d do what I loved
best, with a bunch of like-minded people and get paid for
it. No problem! Well, it wasn’t quite as easy as that but
the product – with a little hard work and a lot of support
from family, friends and a dedicated workforce – is now
Figure 1: The unofficial Marine Park of Conception Bay designated
by Rick Stanley (Drawing Rick Stanley)
sold internationally. Diving on shipwrecks, with whales,
icebergs and in historic sites is, it appears, quite popular with
divers around the World. Ideally, I could show off the Bell
Island Wrecks and the magniicent local marine life and pay
the bills! In addition to beneiting tourism in the Province,
it’s helped increase awareness that we need to look after our
marine environment and, equally as important, the snapshots
of history and culture which ind themselves on the seabed in
the form of shipwrecks and artefacts. In order to keep selling
the product, it needs to remain attractive to the consumer.
However, the marine environment is not manufactured, it’s
a living thing which also provides a unique insight into our
past and if its wonders are to be sold as a commodity, it needs
to be cared for.
Protect & Preserve
Along with a successful marine based business comes the
responsibility of protecting and preserving its resources.
This responsibility has to be shared; it’s way too much for
one person. Education and encouraging respect is the means
by which it is shared. SCUBA Diving is one of the fastest
growing sports and there are two distinct types of diver
who have an impact on protection: those who truly respect
what they see underwater and want to preserve it for future
generations to enjoy and those who care little or nothing
about what they see and attack shipwrecks with crowbars,
taking what they can as trophies to prove they’ve been there.
A picture isn’t proof enough for our latter diver, and too often
an important part of our heritage is consigned to rust away in
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
It’s All About the ‘P’s!
a corner of a garage or be discarded as junk once the bragging
rights have been exhausted.
Prime examples of the need for protection are the Bell Island
Wrecks in Conception Bay. They are the focus of diving
in the Province and will hopefully soon be declared an
Underwater National Historic Site, protected by Federal Law.
These four Allied ore carriers, sunk by German U-Boats in
1942 with the loss of 69 lives, are amongst the best preserved
shipwrecks in the World. There are still many artefacts on
the wrecks, including portholes, lifeboats, guns, kitchen
utensils and personal items, offering divers a glimpse into
the past and perhaps an understanding of what life was like
aboard before the fateful days in September and November
of 1942. The story of the sinkings is very much part of local
folklore, especially due to the historical link with the Bell
Island Mines, the source of the ships’ iron ore cargoes. The
attacks resulted in the only damage caused to “land” by the
enemy in North America during WWII when a torpedo struck
the Scotia Pier on the island. Education is working and the
majority of divers visiting the wrecks these days have the
utmost respect for them. Things haven’t always been that
way, though. They were plundered for years and there are
still many divers who don’t care about preservation efforts
and show no regard for the history surrounding the wrecks or,
apparently, those who died on them. Even deck planking and
doors fall victim to their pursuit for supremacy in a bizarre
competition amongst inconsiderate divers to see who can
collect the “coolest” prize. It’s this diver who we strive to
educate with our “take only pictures and leave only bubbles”
policy – one which is welcomed by many and is, slowly but
surely, having a positive effect.
Divers visiting the wrecks with Ocean Quest are briefed
before departure that theft of artefacts is not tolerated and our
policy is generally accepted in good spirit. An internationally
renowned diver and author, famous for his ‘recovery’ of
artefacts, visited the wrecks in the company’s early days
and summed up in a few words what we hope divers will be
saying for many years to come. “WOW....Unbelievable! A
Wreck diver’s dream!” He took nothing except memories
and photographs away with him, but his experience was no
less rewarding than if he’d had a chunk of rusty old metal (or
should that be piece of history?) tucked away in his luggage.
It’s not just private divers who need educating. Government
organisations and commercial companies employ divers who
operate in often harsh conditions for reasons such as repairs,
ordnance disposal or rescue situations. They have a job to
do – a dificult one – and it’s often not feasible for them
to take care of their surroundings. But they could do more!
For example, extensive damage was done to one of the Bell
Island Wrecks in 2005 when a Coast Guard ship moored to
it, rather than next to it, during a Police Diving Unit exercise.
A call was made to the diving unit to inquire about the
circumstances, but no assurance that efforts would be made
to avoid similar occurrences in the future was received. In
fact, a lippant comment about more damage being done
by icebergs highlighted the lack of awareness I believe is
prevalent among such organisations. There has been iceberg
damage to the wrecks, but it is not signiicant and has not
Figure 2: Deb Stanley at one of the companion ways on the ss
Saganaga (Rick Stanley)
Figure 3: Diver from USA, Arch McNamara, taking pictures of
Telegraph in Engine Room of ss Rosecastle June, 2005
(Deb Stanley)
Figure 4: Captain’s Head on ss Lord Strathcona with porthole intact
(Rick Stanley)
It’s All About the ‘P’s!
happened at all since 1997. Once again, an important part
of local heritage and, indeed, culture was damaged due to
ignorance.
There are many wreck sites in the Province, all of which
deserve protection from humans! Some say restricting
diving on them completely would give them that protection,
but I disagree. The ‘crowbar divers’ would still visit the sites
as effective policing of such a rule would be an enormous
drain on resources and anyway, why deny the majority the
opportunity to get up close and personal with history because
of the actions of an ignorant minority? Perhaps, one day, some
kind of ‘Pay & Play’ or registration process will help control
needless destruction of our heritage and culture, and people
will understand better the laws and repercussions of their
actions. Until then all we can do is keep up the education.
Obviously, nature affects all underwater cultural sites,
whether it be marine life, weather, icebergs or decay. We
have no control over this, and eventually they’ll disappear
completely. For the meantime though, we need to do our
utmost to ensure that process is not accelerated.
Promote
Like all businesses, promotion is essential. Trade shows,
magazines, websites, lyers – whatever it takes to bring
divers here is worth it. Feature articles written by visiting
journalists also play a big part in increasing awareness of our
underwater cultural sites. Photo presentations and seminars
by staff and local divers are popular, and even visitors from
afar give their time to show divers in their home towns what
they’re missing!
The best promotion of all, though, is word of mouth and
that word is deinitely spreading. Relatives of the victims
of the sinkings have heard of the good things happening in
Conception Bay. Annual Remembrance Day visits to the
wrecks with wreaths have prompted private visits by the now
elderly children of some crew members who were unaware
until late in life of how easy it was to visit the site and pay their
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
last respects to fathers they were too small to remember. From
there, they can visit a memorial in nearby Lance Cove, the Bell
Island Mines Museum, which has a section dedicated to the
wrecks, and chat with Islanders who still recall the attacks.
There are many other examples of what I consider to be
part of the promotion process. Every year, an expedition is
mounted by the Royal Air Force from the United Kingdom
to dive in the area. Wreck surveys carried out by them at
sites such as Dildo and Trinity Bay have contributed towards
archaeological studies, and a photographic survey at Bell
Island produced amazing images which are now in demand
all over the world.
In-depth research by the Ocean Quest boat captain, formerly
enlisted in the US Navy, led to the discovery of a torpedo
close to one of the Bell Island wrecks. Ironically, it was a
German diver – a renowned underwater photographer who
considers the wrecks an inspiration – who, with Ocean Quest,
subsequently recovered part of the weapon on behalf of the
Provincial Archaeologists. At times, there is a need to take
items from such sites as long as it is for the right reason, and
this was such an instance. It’s all part of the education.
Profit
A dirty word? Should there be inancial gain from encouraging
respect of the ocean and the history it shrouds? Of course!
Even non-proit organisations survive on donations from
other people’s earnings and revenues, which are generated by
proit. The other ‘P’s depend on the support of the Proit, as it
depends on them. Without it, Passion dwindles, the Product
loses value, Protection & Preservation suffer, and Promotion
becomes pointless. No Proit, end of Dream!
So there you have the “P’s!” Our efforts, which we hope are
worthy, have gained us the unoficial title of “Stewards of the
Bell Island Shipwrecks” – a title we are proud of ,and one
which we hope is an indication that the message is getting
“out there.” We need to protect what we have, so that in the
future, we can “Dive into History.”
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Florida’s Underwater Archaeological Preserves:
Preservation through Education
Florida’s Underwater Archaeological Preserves
Della A. Scott-Ireton
Florida Bureau of Archaeological Research
USA
With the longest coastline in the continental United States,
as well as hundreds of miles of inland waterways, Florida’s
history is tied to a maritime context. The remains of ships
and boats, as well as prehistoric watercraft, are preserved in
the state’s waters. Although all historical and archaeological
sites on state-owned or controlled lands in Florida, including
submerged sites, are protected by law, shipwrecks remain
vulnerable to looting, vandalism, and uninformed souvenir
collecting by sport divers.
Florida is the top sport diving destination in the United States
with thousands of diving and snorkeling visitors contributing
to the state’s economy and impacting the state’s underwater
resources each year. With the exception of one shipwreck in
a national park, all shipwrecks in Florida waters are open for
visitation, although unauthorized disturbance, excavation, or
removal of artifacts is prohibited by the Florida Historical
Resources Act (Chapter 267 of the Florida Statutes). Most
diving visitors, and even many Florida divers, are unaware
of the legal protection of shipwrecks. Additionally, a
pervasive “inders-keepers” attitude, fostered by the media
and local fables of Spanish gold and pirate booty, resulted in
shipwrecks becoming targets for looting and treasure hunting.
In the face of this continuing problem and the inability to
adequately patrol all of the state’s submerged sites, State of
Florida archaeological resource managers rely on intensive
public education programs to promote the protection and
preservation of shipwreck sites.
Florida’s Underwater Archaeological Preserves are historic
shipwrecks around the state interpreted especially for divers
and snorkelers. Visitors are encouraged to explore sites, but
to “take only photos and leave only bubbles.” Interpretation
materials include brochures for each site featuring the history
of the ship and how it came to be wrecked in Florida, a
poster showing all of the Preserves, a laminated underwater
guide illustrating site features and providing safe diving
tips, a bronze marker designating the site as a Preserve and
Florida Heritage Site, and a web page. Additionally, all of the
Preserves are listed on the National Register of Historic Places
and are included on Florida’s Maritime Heritage Trail. These
materials are intended to educate the diving public about the
importance of shipwrecks as remains of our maritime past
and as non-renewable resources deserving protection for
future generations to visit and enjoy.
The establishment of Florida’s Underwater Archaeological
Preserves is the result of partnerships between government
and the public to manage and protect submerged cultural
resources in a cooperative spirit. Underwater sites of
recognized historical and recreational value are designated
as State Preserves in response to local nominations, and by
a public desire for a fuller understanding and appreciation of
Figure 1: A diver explores the Half Moon Preserve
these unique public-owned resources. Once a submerged site
is nominated, it is carefully researched and evaluated for its
suitability to become a Preserve, considering such criteria as
historical value, archaeological integrity, biological diversity,
public accessibility, diving safety, and recreational potential.
If the site meets these criteria, data from its evaluation are
presented in a formal public proposal for the creation of a
new Preserve. Public input generated by the proposal helps
to determine appropriate methods of site enhancement,
interpretation, and protection based on local needs and
desires. Interested organizations and individuals then
work together with state and local governments to prepare
the site and to maintain it as an historical, educational, and
recreational attraction.
Shipwreck parks are a relatively new phenomena as a means
of education and preservation through recreation. Following
the lead of Michigan and Vermont, where sites in cold, fresh
water were established as preserves, Florida’s program began
in 1987, with the designation of Urca de Lima, a Spanish
merchant ship cast ashore on the east coast near Ft. Pierce
during a hurricane in 1715, as the irst state Underwater
Archaeological Preserve. Salvaged soon after her wrecking,
and again by modern treasure hunters, the remains of the
wooden sailing ship lie in shallow water on an offshore
reef, where they became a popular location for sport divers.
Members of the St. Lucie County Historical Commission
approached the Florida Department of State’s Division of
Historical Resources to explore the possibility of giving
the shipwreck a special status that would both interpret and
protect the site for future visitors. Local waterfront businesses
joined with city, county, and state oficials to enhance the
wreck with replica cement cannons to replace those removed
long ago. An oficial bronze plaque, embedded in a cement
monument attached to a large mooring buoy, was positioned
near the wreckage to mark the site and to prevent anchor
damage. Interpretive brochures, thousands of which have
been circulated, were widely distributed to encourage public
visitation and participation in the maintenance of this unique
piece of Florida’s maritime heritage. Urca de Lima thus was
Florida’s Underwater Archaeological Preserves
Figure 2: Poster presenting Florida’s Shipwreck Preserves
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
adopted by the local community as a new historical attraction;
by placing the site in the public’s trust, it became important
for everyone to preserve.
The pattern for establishing the Urca de Lima Preserve
proved to be successful, with public interest and participation
in its management continuing for nearly twenty years at
this writing. Following the popularity of the irst Preserve,
a second Preserve was established in 1989 on San Pedro, a
galleon that grounded in the Florida Keys in 1733. City of
Hawkinsville, a sunken steamboat in the Suwannee River,
became a third shipwreck park in 1992. USS Massachusetts
(BB-2), the nation’s oldest surviving battleship, was
designated in Pensacola in 1993 and the wreck of the steamer
ss Copenhagen near Pompano Beach became a Preserve
in 1994. In 1997, ss Tarpon, a merchant vessel that sunk
in a gale off Panama City, was designated a Preserve. In
2000, Florida’s seventh Preserve was established at Half
Moon, a German racing yacht sunk off Key Biscayne near
Miami. The eighth Preserve is the Norwegian lumber
barque Lofthus, wrecked in a storm off Boynton Beach and
dedicated in 2004. In the same year the steamer Vamar, sunk
under mysterious circumstances off Port St. Joe, became the
Florida’s Underwater Archaeological Preserves
state’s ninth Preserve. The molasses barge Regina, wrecked
in a storm off Bradenton Beach, was added to the Preserve
system in 2005. State archaeologists continue to work with
local communities to establish Preserves as new sites are
nominated and investigated.
As an area set aside for enjoyment by the public and protection
by the state, an Underwater Archaeological Preserve is an
experiment in cultural resource management. These Preserves
are of past and future historical value and can provide a means
of education through recreation for generations to come.
Furthermore, they offer the public a chance to participate in
local historic preservation. Shipwreck Preserves throughout
Florida have enabled local communities to develop a sense
of stewardship and pride in their submerged historic sites
as pieces of their own history and heritage. By establishing
a Preserve, residents and visitors have the opportunity to
become better informed about their past and to become
more aware of the long-term value of preserving a historic
shipwreck in its natural setting. This local involvement
strengthens a community’s ties with the past while enhancing
recreation and tourism in the present and contributing to the
preservation of all historic shipwrecks.
Figure 3: Divers inspect the bronze plaque at the ss Copenhagen
Preserve
Marine Aggregates and Prehistory
Marine Aggregates and Prehistory
Antony Firth
Head of Coastal and Marine Projects
Wessex Archaeology
United Kingdom
Over the last decade, the companies that dredge aggregates
(sand and gravel) from the seas around the UK have taken
increasing account of archaeological issues. The process
of Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) provided
the initial framework for addressing the implications
of marine aggregate for the historic environment in the
course of applications for dredging licences. While the EIA
framework continues to be of central importance, it has been
supplemented by wider initiatives from industry and by
the recent availability of substantial resources through the
Aggregate Levy Sustainability Fund.
As well as having potential impacts on shipwrecks, marine
aggregate dredging has clear implications for prehistoric
remains on the seabed. Aggregate companies frequently
target sand and gravel that was deposited by rivers in
glacial periods when sea-level was up to 130m lower than
today. At these times, both after the last (Devensian) glacial
maximum and during previous glaciations, there were vast
areas of land around the present UK. This land was inhabited
periodically by our predecessors, until they were obliged to
quit by rising sea-levels. While it was dry land, and while
the sea was encroaching, the land supported plant and
animal life as well as humans; microscopic evidence of these
previous environments can be found within ine-grained
sediments laid down at the time, and once-inhabitable land
surfaces can be found in and below deposits of peat. Flint
artefacts recovered by ishermen, and a small number of in
situ archaeological sites found close to the shore, strongly
suggest that further archaeological material is to be found
much further offshore, in the deeper water where aggregate
dredging takes place. Furthermore, the aggregate companies
are keen to avoid dredging the peats and ine-grained deposits
of such potential interest to archaeologists, because this
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
material will contaminate the clean aggregates upon which
their business depends. The challenge, therefore, has been to
establish whether important archaeological material exists in
areas that contain commercially-attractive aggregate deposits,
and to develop methods that can enable dredging areas to be
assessed and evaluated archaeologically in the course of the
EIA process.
Wessex Archaeology (WA) has carried out numerous EIA
studies of marine aggregate licence proposals. Initially,
aggregate companies were facing the contention that there
was uniformly high potential for prehistoric archaeological
material across the seabed, and that aggregate dredging
was causing untold damage. In WA’s early EIA studies, we
worked with aggregate companies to understand not only the
process of dredging, but also the processes of investigation
and monitoring that aggregate companies undertake when
prospecting for aggregates and when gauging possible
effects relating to other environmental and commercial
concerns, such as marine ecology, ishing and sediment
transport. It was soon apparent that the aggregate companies
had both expertise and data that could be used to inform the
assessment of archaeological potential. This initial work
often involved reinterpreting geophysical and geotechnical
data, and developing models of how sea level change may
have affected the landscape. Analogies were also drawn from
prehistoric archaeological inds on adjacent coastlines, in
the upper reaches of river catchments which – at the time
– lowed down through the submerged landscapes that are
now being targeted for marine aggregates.
These early studies helped to localise areas of archaeological
potential and provide them with context. They also showed
that in many instances the aggregates being targeted
were adjacent to areas of archaeological potential, but the
aggregates themselves were likely to contain only derived
archaeological material that had been repeatedly eroded
and re-deposited, rather than in situ material of higher
importance. Other conclusions could be drawn, notably how
Figure 1: One frame from the digital
animated reconstruction of a Mesolithic
landscape,
based
directly
upon
geophysical and palaeo-environmental
data from the ALSF Seabed Prehistory
project
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Marine Aggregates and Prehistory
Figures 2 & 3: Shallow seismic section through an infilled palaeo-channel in about 30m of water, off the coast of Sussex
Figure 4: Flints thought to have been
struck by humans, recovered in grabsamples from the English Channel
10 Marine Aggregates and Prehistory
complex the sequences of deposition, erosion and inundation
could be, and how limited our understanding was. It was also
clear that while data obtained for prospecting or ecological
purposes could be reinterpreted, the data would be even more
useful if archaeological objectives could be incorporated into
surveys from the start. Also, our assessments were largely
hypothetical, as we lacked direct evidence of prehistoric land
surfaces, or of their supposed inhabitants.
At this point, the association representing the majority of
marine aggregate companies the British Marine Aggregate
Producers Association (BMAPA), took the initiative of
seeking to spread the good archaeological practice being
developed by some aggregate companies across the whole of
the industry. BMAPA, in partnership with the heritage agencies
(the Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of
England (RCHME) later incorporated into English Heritage)
commissioned a series of strategic projects which included
the preparation of (Marine Aggregate Dredging and the
Historic Environment: Guidance Note) (BMAPA and English
Heritage, April 2003).
While the Guidance Note was being prepared, a major
fund for strategic research became available. In an effort
to encourage more sustainable use of terrestrial and marine
aggregate resources, the UK Government introduced a tax
on aggregates known as the Aggregates Levy. A part of this
tax was directed to sustainability projects, by way of the
Aggregates Levy Sustainability Fund (ALSF). Among the
agencies responsible for distributing the ALSF were English
Heritage and the Minerals Industry Research Organisation
(MIRO). Round 1 of the ALSF ran from 2002 to 2004, and
among projects relating to prehistoric material on the seabed
were two WA projects, Artefacts from the Sea, using funds
administered by English Heritage, and Seabed Prehistory,
using funds administered by MIRO. Artefacts from the Sea
sought to enhance national and local records of previous
prehistoric inds made at sea or on the coast, to provide a
irmer basis for understanding the context and importance
of any archaeological material found in offshore aggregate
dredging areas. As part of the project, almost 300 prehistoric
artefacts collected by a isherman, Michael White, were
catalogued for the irst time. The Seabed Prehistory
project sought to improve the application of geophysical
and geotechnical survey methods commonly used by the
aggregate industry, so that better archaeological results could
be obtained. A study area off the Sussex coast was subject
to very high resolution sub-bottom proiling, to vibrocoring
and to benthic grabbing, followed by digital processing,
paleo-environmental analysis and scientiic dating. As well
as generating important methodological conclusions, the
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
project identiied a Mesolithic landscape dating to c. 9000
BP in about 30m of water some 12km offshore, immediately
adjacent to an aggregate dredging area. Systematic benthic
grabbing of 100m x 100m cells in the same area recovered a
small number of lints that are thought to have been struck
by humans.
The Seabed Prehistory project has continued in Round 2
of the ALSF, which runs from 2004 to 2007, using funds
administered by English Heritage and MIRO. As well as
additional grabbing in the original study area off Sussex,
which has recovered peat and charcoal as well as more
probable human-struck lints, geophysical and geotechnical
surveys are being carried out 50km offshore in the Eastern
English Channel, off Great Yarmouth in East Anglia, and off
the Humber Estuary in the southern North Sea. The Round
2 ALSF project has also included the development of a
computer animation of the Mesolithic landscape off Sussex,
drawing directly from the data acquired in Round 1, both as a
means of public outreach, and as an interpretative device.
Following on from the Guidance Note, BMAPA and English
Heritage have recently introduced a Protocol for Reporting
Finds of Archaeological Interest, to make it easier for
aggregate industry staff on wharves and vessels to report the
things that they ind. The Protocol acts as a safety net for
discoveries that were not anticipated in the course of EIA,
but it also helps to increase archaeological understanding
throughout the aggregate industry. A Protocol Awareness
Programme, involving visits by archaeologists to aggregate
workers throughout England to give guidance on how to
identify, handle and store artefacts, has recently started with
the support of the ALSF.
Collaboration with the aggregates industry has enabled
advances in methods and knowledge relating to the prehistory
of the seabed around the UK that could hardly have been
imagined just a decade ago. Signiicant scientiic discoveries
are being made whilst improving the sustainability of
continued aggregate dredging. In many respects, the UK
aggregate industry has led the way in showing how marine
archaeology can be accommodated within commercial
activity, and the lessons learned have spilled into other sectors
such as offshore renewable energy. These are exciting times,
and the best is yet to come.
Further Reading
BMAPA and English Heritage (2003) Marine Aggregate Dredging
and the Historic Environment: guidance note. British Marine
Aggregate Producers Association and English Heritage, London.
http://www.wessexarch.co.uk/projects/marine/bmapa/index.html
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Queen of Nations:
A Shipwreck with Influence
Queen of Nations 11
David Nutley
Coordinator Underwater Cultural Heritage Program
New South Wales Heritage Ofice
Australia
The Shipwreck
The Queen of Nations, under the command of Captain Samuel
Bache, made the last of its voyages to Australia in early 1881.
Part of the cargo consisted of thousands of bottles of spirits
and wine. It was later reported that both the captain and irst
mate became “hopelessly drunk” for most of the voyage.
Before dawn on May 31, 1881, and only a couple of hundred
kilometres south of Sydney Harbour, Captain Bache mistook
a slag heap ire on Mount Keira off Wollongong for the light
on Port Jackson’s south head. Accordingly, he turned the
ship toward shore in the belief that he was entering Sydney
Harbour and literally drove through the surf onto Corrimal
Beach, just to the north of Wollongong.
The Queen of Nations began to break up nearly two weeks
later.
Location
The Queen of Nations shipwreck is on the New South
Wales coast, south of Sydney and four kilometres north
of Wollongong. The site lies approximately 70 metres off
Corrimal Beach opposite the outlet of Towradgi Creek. When
exposed, the remains cover an area of approximately 60x15
metres in a water depth of 3-5 metres, within and just past
the surf zone.
Figure 1: Queen of Nations bow (D Nutley 1991)
Periodically, violent storms uncover parts of the wreck. On
one of these occasions, in 1976, the wreckage was regarded
by the local council as nothing but a swimming hazard.
Considerable quantities of timber were dragged out of the
water by bulldozers. Most of this was chopped up and burned
or used as landill. The lower hull and its contents were either
still buried in sand or could not be effectively removed. As
the sand cover returned to normal levels, any exposed remains
were reburied and once again forgotten.
The lower hull still remained intact from stem to stern and
retained a considerable quantity of cargo and other artefacts.
These were exposed in 1991 by another storm-induced
scouring at Corrimal Beach. Almost the entire site was
exposed. Bottles of spirits and preserved food, baby’s bottles,
railway iron, tins of lead paint, crates of rubber galoshes and
even a variety of cemetery headstones were revealed.
One of the major changes between the exposure in 1976
and 1991 had been the establishment of an Underwater
Cultural Heritage Program in the Department of Planning’s
Heritage Branch. (The Heritage became a separate agency,
the New South Wales Heritage Ofice, in 1996.) When the
remains were discovered by divers from the Public Works
Department, staff in the Heritage Branch were notiied and
Figure 2: Wheel on Queen of Nations wreck site ( D Nutley 1991)
an inspection and survey was commenced within a couple of
days and completed a week later.
Unfortunately, word quickly got out and the vulnerability of
the Queen of Nations to looting quickly became apparent.
Between the irst day of survey and a second visit a week
later, the site was subjected to concerted looting. Hammers,
dredge hoses and knives were used, often by people using
only snorkelling equipment, to pry open wooden crates and
to break up concretions. In the process, numerous ceramics,
glass and wooden items were smashed and washed out to
1 Queen of Nations
sea. This included sealed bottles of preserved pickles and
Hennessey’s Cognac – still within their original packing crates.
The pickled vegetables were in almost mint condition.
This was a devastating loss of information and highlighted
a gaping hole in the legislative protection for historic
shipwrecks at that time.
Commonwealth legislation was already in place to protect
historic shipwrecks, but declaration was on a ship-by-ship
basis. Until such a declaration was made, there was provision
under the Act to prevent destructive interference with the wreck
site. In order to protect the Queen of Nations, a submission
needed to be prepared, signed off by a Australian Minister and
listed in the Government Gazette. The submission required
the completion of a site survey, research into the history of the
vessel and an assessment of the signiicance of the site. The
legislation that had jurisdiction over this site was national, the
Historic Shipwrecks Act of 1976. This legislation is largely
administered under delegation to appropriate authorities in
each State or Territory. In New South Wales at that time it
was the Director of Planning.
In addition to conducting the survey and report preparation,
the submission for Gazettal under the Historic Shipwrecks Act
required signing off by a number of levels of management. At
the State level this consisted of the Manager of the Heritage
Branch, the Division Head, the Assistant Director and the
Director. Once that was completed, the submission was
then sent to the appropriate government department in the
National Capital, Canberra, passed through their departmental
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
hierarchy and inally made its way to the Minister. In this
case, a gazettal process that often took months was completed
in just two weeks. The Queen of Nations was a gazetted
as a Historic Shipwreck on 7 February 1992 under Section
5 of the Historic Shipwrecks Act. The listing applies to the
shipwreck and all relics associated with the shipwreck.
In spite of these efforts, it was not suficient to save much
of the fragile cargo which had survived 110 years under the
sea.
The experience with the Queen of Nations highlighted the
need for automatic, or ‘blanket’ protection. The ability for
this already existed in Section 5 of the Historic Shipwrecks
Act but required agreement by all State, Territory and national
Delegates in order for it to be enacted. Previous efforts to
call up this section of the Act had failed, but the Queen of
Nations episode placed this issue in a glaring spotlight. As a
result of heavy lobbying by New South Wales and other State
oficials, ‘blanket protection’ was enacted in 1993. Now, any
Australian shipwreck older than 75 years is automatically
protected, and it is illegal to remove artefacts or disturb them
in any way.
On the positive side, the tragic experience of the Queen
of Nations played an important roll in the protection of
Australia’s underwater cultural heritage. It also, in part,
contributed to Australia’s strong stand on this issue during
the formulation of the UNESCO Convention for the
protection of the underwater cultural heritage. It is perhaps
one of the most important components of that Convention.
Figure 3: Marble cross, part of cargo near ship’s stern (D Nutley 1991)
Queen of Nations 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The difference between 75 years for the Historic Shipwrecks
Act and the 100 years in the UNESCO convention is neither
here nor there. It is the immediacy that automatic protection
provides after the lapse of a given period of time. This
statutory protection from human interference that sites have
from the moment they are found is of the utmost importance.
It removes a window of opportunity for those bent on short
term site exploitation and allows the immediate application
of conservation principles that preserve long-term values of
underwater cultural heritage as a source of information and
as a truly international heritage.
Figure 4: Site plan, 1991
(Drawn by Tim Smith)
Information Sources
The Clipper Ship Queen of Nations, 1998, Information Sheet,
Maritime Heritage Online, http://maritime.heritage.nsw.gov.au,
New South Wales Heritage Ofice
Shipwreck Atlas of New South Wales, (3rd edition) 1996, New South
Wales Heritage Ofice, Parramatta
Nutley, D & Smith, T, 1992, Queen of Nations (1861-1881):
Conservation Management Plan, Heritage Branch, Department of
Planning, Sydney, NSW, Australia
Saunders, R, 1999, “Queen of Nations: A Drunken Tragedy,”
manuscript prepared for the NSW Heritage Ofice
1 RMS Titanic
RMS Titanic
Ole Varmer
Attorney-Advisor
Ofice of the General Counsel for International Law
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
USA
History and Interests
RMS Titanic is perhaps the most famous shipwreck in our
current popular culture. It was built in Belfast, Ireland by
Harland and Wolff. Titanic was a British lagged steamship
and the largest and most luxurious passenger ship of its time.
It was owned by the White Star Line and was reported to be
unsinkable!
On April 10, 1912, Titanic set sail from Southampton, United
Kingdom, on its maiden voyage to New York City with 2227
passengers and crew. It has been said that the captain was
trying to break the record for a transatlantic journey despite
repeated warnings about icebergs. It was traveling at near
top speed of about 20.5 knots when at 11:40 PM on April
14, 1912, an iceberg grazed its side. Less than three hours
later, Titanic plunged to the bottom of the sea, taking more
than 1500 men, women and children with her, many of whom
were trapped inside the ship’s hull.
Since its sinking on April 15, 1912 and the associated loss of
life, Titanic has captivated the interest of people around the
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
world. These maritime casualties resulted in governmental
investigations in the United States as well as the United
Kingdom. They had a direct impact on the development
of international law regarding safety in the navigation
of ships. They were the catalysts for the Safety of Life
at Sea Convention, as well as for the establishment of the
International Maritime Organization.
Discovery of the Wreck and Concern about
Disturbing the Memorial-Site
The wreckage of Titanic was discovered on September 1,
1985, during a joint French/U.S. expedition lead by JeanLuis Michel of the French Ocean Institute (IFREMIR) and
Dr. Robert Ballard. It was found approximately 340 nautical
miles (nm) off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada two miles
beneath the high seas (depth of 12 500 feet or 3,800 meters).
The expedition discovered that the stern section was some
1,970 feet (600m) from the bow section and did not sink to
the bottom intact as was previously believed. Shortly after
the discovery, Dr. Ballard appeared before the US Congress
seeking to protect the wreck. Congress responded through
the enactment of legislation directing the Department of
State to negotiate an international agreement to designate the
wreck as a maritime memorial. A U.S. company working
with IFREMIR returned to the wreck in 1987 and began to
salvage artifacts from the debris ield.
Figure 1: A close-up of the Titanic’s bow
(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Institute for Exploration and University of Rhode Island)
RMS Titanic 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 2: A view of the steering motor on the bridge of the Titanic
(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Institute for Exploration and University of Rhode Island)
US Acts to Address the Threats of Misguided Salvage
The RMS Titanic Maritime Memorial Act of 1986 (Titanic
Act) was enacted to protect this unique shipwreck from
potential harm caused by misguided salvage. The Congress
recognized that while the United States had a signiicant
interest in protecting Titanic, it needed the cooperation of
other interested nations. Thus the Congress directed the
Department of State to negotiate an international agreement
with Canada, France, the United Kingdom and any other
interested nation to protect Titanic from looting and
misguided salvage. The Titanic Act also directed the US
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
to consult with these same nations and develop guidelines
for the exploration, research and, if determined appropriate,
salvage of artifacts.
The tragic loss of so many lives and the encasement of their
remains in the hull caused many people around the world to
view the shipwreck as a grave site. Accordingly, Congress
directed that the agreement should designate the wreck site as
a maritime memorial. In addition, Titanic is of great interest
to scientists, archaeologists, historians, naval architects,
educators, salvors, the media, and the public. For this reason,
representatives of many diverse groups were consulted and
their interests were considered during the preparation of
the NOAA Guidelines and the international agreement. The
Final Minutes of the International Agreement Concerning
the Shipwrecked Vessel R.M.S. Titanic (Agreement) were
signed in 1999. The salvage company RMS Titanic, Inc.
subsequently sued NOAA and the Department of State in
an attempt to stop the signing of the Agreement. The suit
was dismissed. NOAA published the Titanic Guidelines on
the Research, Exploration and Salvage in 2001. The United
Kingdom signed the Agreement in 2003. The Department of
State signed the Agreement on behalf of the United States in
2004.
The NOAA Guidelines, International
Agreement and Annexed Rules
The NOAA Guidelines are based on the International
Council of Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) Charter as
well as standards and requirements in the U.S. Federal
Archaeological Program developed by the Department of
Interior, National Park Service. The NOAA Guidelines
and the Rules annexed to the Agreement on Titanic are
essentially the same as the Rules annexed to the UNESCO
Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural
Heritage (2001). The NOAA Guidelines, the Agreement
and the Rules incorporate the policy that in situ preservation
of the wreck site be considered as the irst management
option. However, if a Party determines that it is appropriate
to recover artifacts, then the responsible authority is to take
all reasonable measures to ensure that all artifacts recovered
1 RMS Titanic
from Titanic by those subject to its jurisdiction are conserved
and curated consistently with the Rules and are kept together
and intact as project collections. It also requires each Party
to take the necessary measures, in respect of its nationals
and vessels lying its lag, to regulate through a system of
project authorizations: (a) entry into the hull sections of
Titanic so that they, other artifacts and any human remains
are not disturbed; and (b) activities aimed at the artifacts from
Titanic found outside the hull of the wreck so that all such
activities are, to the maximum extent practicable, conducted
in accordance with the Rules.
Future Measures to Address Natural Deterioration
and Recovery or Salvage
The US Ocean Policy Action Plan provides that the Bush
Administration will submit recommended legislation along
with the Agreement to Congress for its consideration. While
the advice and consent of the Senate is not required for the
executive agreement, implementing legislation is necessary
for it to come into effect in the United States. Such legislation
is currently under development. The United Kingdom has
already enacted legislation to implement the Agreement.
Although the Agreement and the NOAA Guidelines are not
enforceable by NOAA or other federal agencies under the
current Titanic Act of 1986, they have been cited by the
admiralty court in support of its orders regarding management
of the collection of Titanic artifacts. The court will likely
continue to manage the salvage of the wreck site under
the federal common law of salvage until the international
agreement becomes effective for the United States through
the enactment of legislation.
Jeremy Wierich, a marine archaeologist with the NOAA
Ofice of Ocean Exploration, worked with Dr. Ballard and
microbial research scientist Roy Cullimore, to map the
wreck site and study the natural deterioration of the ship’s
hull. The tiny microbes that feed on iron and create icicleshaped formations called rusticles are responsible for the
deterioration. While rusticles have been observed for many
years, little is known about them and thus how to slow the
natural deterioration process. The in situ policy preference
to not unnecessarily disturb the wreck site for reasons
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
of historic preservation is consistent with the respectful
treatment of the site as a maritime memorial. However,
because of the natural deterioration of the wreck, requests
for continued salvage/recovery are likely to continue. The
NOAA Guidelines, Agreement and Rules set forth the legal
and scientiic requirements for how to preserve the wreck site
as a memorial and a site for historic preservation, as well
as for the scientiic salvage/recovery of artifacts, when it is
determined to be in the public’s interest.
As the United States’ ocean agency, NOAA’s responsibilities
include the scientiic and cultural aspects of the Titanic and
its appropriate treatment and preservation. NOAA’s research
focus is to build a baseline of scientiic information from
which to measure the shipwreck’s processes and deterioration
and then apply that knowledge to other underwater cultural
heritage sites.
Information Sources
Public Law No. 99-513, Oct. 21, 1986, 100 Stat. 2082, 16 U.S.C. s.
450rr – 450rr-6 (2005).
HR Report on HR 99-393, 99th Cong. 1st Sess., pp 4-8 (21
November 1985).
NOAA Guidelines for Research, Exploration and Salvage of RMS
Titanic, 66 Fed. Reg. 18905, 18908-09 (April 12, 2001)
http://ocean.ceq/actionplan.pdf p.24. It also provides plan for
protecting sunken military craft and interpreting the maritime
heritage in the Great Lakes.
http://www.state.gov/r/pa/prs/ps/2004/33690.htm
RMS Titanic Inc. v. Wrecked, and Abandoned Vessel, 323 F.Supp.
724 (E.D. Va. 2004).
P. Niemeyer, Applying Jus Gentium to the Salvage of the RMS
Titanic in International Waters, Nicholas J. Healey Lecture on
Admiralty Law, New York University (5 May 2005)
RMS Titanic Inc. v. Wrecked, and Abandoned Vessel, Civ. No.
2:93cv902 (E.D. Va. July 28, 2000) (order enjoining RMST from
penetrating or cutting into the Titanic or selling any artifacts)
http://www.si.edu/RESOURCE/FAQ/nmah/titanic.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RMS_Titanic
http://www.archaeology.org/0101/etc/titanic2.html
The Sound of Campeche 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Sound of Campeche:
A Place Full of History
Pilar Luna E.
Head of Underwater Archaeology
Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia
México
Background
During the 16th-, 17th- and 18th-centuries, the port of San
Francisco de Campeche was a constant target of pirates,
corsairs and buccaneers. Legendary characters such as
Francis Drake, Lorencillo, Grammont or even Mary Read,
one of the few women who practiced piracy, were responsible
for the sinking of several ships in the area known as the
Sound of Campeche, in the Gulf of Mexico. In addition,
there were storms, reefs and hurricanes that contributed as
well to the wreck of many European ships. Thus, the Sound
of Campeche became an important cemetery of vessels, many
of which have survived along the centuries.
The Sound of Campeche encloses the coastal waters of the
states of Yucatan and Campeche, in the Southeast part of the
Mexican Republic. In 1997, during the irst ield season of a
project undertaken by the National Institute of Anthropology
and History (INAH) to search for the remains of the ships lost
by the New Spain Fleet in 1631 due to a storm in the Gulf
of Mexico, 24 sites were located in this area. The following
year, during the second ield season, this time using remote
sensing systems, more than 70 magnetic anomalies were
detected; most of them proved to contain cultural vestiges.
These indings included shipwrecks as well as isolated
elements, all products of maritime activities that took place
between the 16th-century and the present. All this led to
the creation of a project entitled “Inventory and Diagnosis
of Submerged Cultural Resources in the Gulf of Mexico.”
More indings have been made during the sea campaigns
Figure 1: The Sound of Campeche in the
Gulf of Mexico has been a witness of five
centuries of navigation (INAH/SAS)
of 2003, 2004 and 2005. All indings have been recorded
through drawing, photography and video, in situ preservation
has been applied, and very few recoveries have taken place.
Parallel to the offshore surveys, another group of INAH
archaeologists has been working on coastal waters in the
state of Campeche with the support of local institutions and
individuals.
Many of these sites are at risk from human interference due
mainly to two factors: the great distance that makes the task
of surveillance dificult or, on the contrary, because of their
proximity to the coast which makes access easy. Evidence
of looting, including the use of dynamite, was noticed in
some of the offshore sites. It is known that sport divers and
ishermen have extracted mostly artillery pieces, anchors and
iron shots to sell them as archaeological treasures or as well
as scrap metal.
Main Findings
The information gathered in situ and the analysis of the
extracted pieces allowed preliminary results to be obtained
regarding chronology, nationality, state of preservation and
importance of some of the sites.
One of the main indings is a 16th-century shipwreck, most
probably Spanish. This site was located in an area where
shallow waters, abundance of corals and the force of the
waves make navigation a dificult task. Probably in this area
many ships found their end during the exploration, discovery
and conquest epochs. Assorted pieces of artillery and anchors
typical from the 16th-century were found lying two and
three meters deep on the reef formed by the South and East
Triángulos keys (Moya, 2003). There are many questions
still without an answer regarding this maritime accident.
1 The Sound of Campeche
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
lead ingots had a triple use: 1) as ballast to stabilize the ship
2) as merchandise that could be sold or exchanged in any port
and 3) as metal that could be melted and transformed into
bullets or pieces to repair the ship (Galindo 2003). Apparently,
this is the largest lead ingot collection ever recovered in the
Western Hemisphere.
An Enriching Experience
Figure 2: Part of the 40 lead ingot collection recovered in 1998 at
the Sound of Campeche (INAH/SAS)
The experience in Campeche has proved to be quite positive
in many aspects. A campaign to raise consciousness among
the local community has been taking place over the last three
years, involving mainly ishermen in the protection of the
coastal sites. In fact, many of them have taken us directly
to sites discovered by them, or have informed INAH about
the location of cultural remains. Each ield season, there
are more ishermen and more local people willing to share
with us the location of new sites and to collaborate in their
protection and in the inventory project.
As part of this consciousness campaign, lectures on the
importance of the UNESCO Convention on the Protection
of Underwater Cultural Heritage have been given in diverse
forums. Articles and interviews often appear in the local
press, radio and TV.
Figure 3: Archaeologist Donald H. Keith facilitating a training
course for members and collaborators of INAH’s projects in
Campeche (INAH/SAS)
However, the logistics involved, the dangerous characteristics
of the zone, the climatic conditions and inancial and time
obstacles have not allowed a second visit to this site.
Other important discoveries are two shipwrecks dating from
the second half of the 18th-century. Both are probably British,
one of them apparently corresponding to the Meleager. This
site was named Cañón de Cañones, due to the geographical
features of its location ─ inside a “canyon” and the amount
of cannons found there. The second site was named Don
Pancho, honoring the local isherman who acted as our guide
and who played a vital role in its location. Here, artillery
pieces, navigation instruments, lead bullets, iron shots, and
lead ingots were found.
Regarding these ingots, during the 1997 works twenty of
them were found; one was recovered as a diagnosis element.
When returning to the site in 1998, one ingot was missing
and the place showed traces of looting. To manage this
threat, it was decided to extract all the pieces, which resulted
in a collection of 40 ingots, most of them oval shaped while
others are rectangular, semi-triangular or have an irregular
shape. The average weight of each piece runs between 49 and
79.5 kilos. 32 show marks, and of those 15 also have holes.
Until now, no relationship has been established according to
shapes, marks or holes. In the past, when carried in a ship,
Solid links have been established with local and regional
authorities and civilian, academic and military institutions,
while collaboration with international institutions and
colleagues has played a vital role. In short, the work in the
Sound of Campeche has resulted in an excellent training ield
not only for the members of INAH’s projects, but also for
collaborators as students, divers, ishermen and even a local
policeman.
This has paved the way to begin a permanent underwater
archaeology program in Campeche and to sign a collaboration
agreement with the state university in order to start working
on the treatment of archaeological materials recovered
from the sea, with the intention of eventually creating a full
laboratory.
At the same time, plans have begun to transform some
underwater sites into museums along the coastal waters.
These will be opened to the public, under the surveillance
of an oficial guide, as a recreational and educational visit.
It is anticipated that this will increase the interest of the
local community and the visitors in the submerged cultural
patrimony and its preservation.
Legal Aspect
The National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH)
was founded in 1939 as the oficial agency to protect, research
and preserve archaeological sites in the Mexican Republic.
Although Mexico has signed and ratiied several international
treaties related to the protection of the cultural patrimony,
it has not created a speciic law regarding the underwater
cultural heritage. In the last thirty years, INAH has applied
the Ley Federal sobre Monumentos y Zonas Arqueológicos,
Artísticos e Históricos (Federal Law on Archaeological,
The Sound of Campeche 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Archaeology. None of these applications have succeeded;
nevertheless, minor looting exists due mainly to the lack
of consciousness of some sport divers and ishermen who
are not aware of the importance and cultural value of this
legacy.
Mexico’s position regarding the protection of its cultural
patrimony has been internationally recognized. This position
was defended by the Mexican delegation during the experts
meetings to elaborate the text of UNESCO Convention
on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage.
Mexico was one of the countries that voted in favor of the
Convention in November 2001, and is currently working
in the process of its ratiication. The above-mentioned
federal law and regulations have served to stop treasure
hunters and commercial exploitation. However, once the
UNESCO Convention becomes a legal instrument, it will do
even more. The Convention includes norms for responsible
archaeological work and ongoing management of underwater
cultural heritage. Ratiication will prove of great value
not only for Mexico, but for all nations who care for their
history.
Information Sources
Galindo, Roberto E. (2003). “The Don Pancho Site: An 18th
Century English Shipwreck.” Paper presented at the Fifth World
Archaeological Congress. June 21-26. Washington, DC.
Figure 5: Reconstruction of a modern shipwreck located at the
coastal waters of Campeche, based on information gathered in
situ and completed by data found at a local archive (INAH/SAS)
Artistic and Historical Monuments and Zones) (INAH 1972)
and its Disposiciones Reglamentarias para la Investigación
Arqueológica en México (Regulations for Archaeological
Research in Mexico) (INAH 1974), in the struggle to prevent
looting and damage to the national patrimony including the
underwater cultural vestiges.
Within INAH there is a Consejo de Arqueología (Council of
Archaeology), constituted by eleven members of different
specialties and institutions, in charge of evaluating and
approving or rejecting any archaeological project to be
fulilled in Mexican territory, on ground or underwater,
and based on the Reglamento del Consejo de Arqueología
(Norms of the Council of Archaeology) (INAH 1990). Every
year, this Council receives applications of treasure hunters
groups trying to get permits to exploit shipwrecks, many of
which are located in the Sound of Campeche. In fact, several
of these applications are related to Nuestra Señora del Juncal,
one of the lagships of the 1631 New Spain Fleet currently
under study by INAH’s Vice-Directorate on Underwater
ICOMOS (1996). The ICOMOS International Charter on the
Protection and Management of Underwater Cultural Heritage,
ICOMOS, Paris
Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (1972). Ley Federal
sobre Monumentos y Zonas Arqueológicos, Artísticos e Históricos,
Mexico
Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (1985). Disposiciones
Legales del Patrimonio Cultural, Mexico
Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia (1990). Reglamento
del Consejo de Arqueología y Disposiciones Reglamentarias para
la Investigación Arqueológica en México, Mexico
Moya Sordo, Vera (2003). “Riddles in the Dark: A Behavioral
Interpretation of a Submerged 16th Century Archaeological
Context.” Paper presented at the Fifth World Archaeological
Congress. June 21-26. Washington, DC.
UNESCO (2002). Protect the Underwater Cultural Heritage,
information kit, Paris
UNESCO (2001). The UNESCO Convention on the Protection of
Underwater Cultural Heritage, Paris
Luna E., Pilar (2005). “La importancia del Anexo de la Convención
para la producción de conocimiento arqueológico”, paper presented
at the Simposio Internacional de Arqueología Subaquática – XIII
Congresso da Sociedade deArqueologia Brasileira – SAP, Campo
Grande, Brasil
0 The Monte Cristi
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Monte Cristi “Pipe Wreck”
Jerome Lynn Hall
Assistant Professor
University of San Diego
USA
Background
The Monte Cristi “Pipe Wreck” faces signiicant threats from
both natural and human origins. The following is an outline
of steps taken by the Monte Cristi Shipwreck Project (MCSP)
in managing these impacts on this important site.
The “Pipe Wreck,” so-called for the large quantity of clay,
tobacco smoking pipes carried as cargo, was, until recently,
one of the best known, yet least understood submerged
cultural resources in the Dominican Republic.
However, this is changing thanks to the generous support of
several United States-based non-proit organizations, the
University of San Diego (USD), and the dedication of the
Oicina Nacional de Patrimonio Cultural Subacuático in Santo
Domingo. The remains of this 17th-century merchantman are
reshaping how we view colonial life in the Americas.
Figure 1: Yvonne Broeder, Monte Cristi Pipe Wreck team
conservator, working at the dredge screen
The presence of intrusive artifacts on the site along with
anecdotal evidence collected by the MCSP team combine
to suggest that the “Pipe Wreck” has been salvaged many
times over the past three and a half centuries. This is due,
in large part, to its location in shallow, clear water less than
a kilometer from the mainland. The geographical fact that
the northern coast of Hispaniola is located in the seasonal
hurricane corridor poses a threat to all submerged cultural
resources in its shallow coastal waters, including the “Pipe
Wreck.” Today, the expansion of the Monte Cristi suburbs
and the development of a regional yacht club have resulted in
an increasing number of tourist “day cruises” that pass within
meters of — if not directly over — the site.
Archaeological Investigation
When archaeological excavation commenced in 1991, the
visible portion of the site comprised scattered ballast stones,
pipe stems, ceramics sherds, and concreted iron caldron
fragments. Careful study of these artifacts by archaeologists
and volunteers of the MCSP led to the formulation of research
questions which, to date, have guided seven excavation
seasons and several archival studies:
•
•
•
•
Could the site be accurately, if not precisely, dated?
Did the extant hull and cargo suggest a nation of origin?
Could a speciic vessel and journey be implicated?
Why did the vessel sink in the shallow water of a
protected bay?
The investigation of these and other questions eventually led
the team to hypothesize that the remains were of an inbound
Dutch merchant vessel that wrecked between 1630 and 1665.
Testing this idea entailed years of controlled excavation,
historical research, and the subsequent conservation,
analyses, and interpretation of numerous artifacts. As a result,
researchers have revised the original date range, replacing it
with a terminus post quem (date after which) of 1651 for the
vessel’s demise and narrowing the temporal window from 35
to 14 years.
The Artifacts
The remnant cargo of the “Pipe Wreck” – not yet fully
excavated – is certainly one of the largest and most diverse
of any inbound merchantman destined for the Americas,
rivaled only by Belle (1686), the “Quicksilver galleons”
Conde de Tolosa and Nuestra Señora de Guadalupe (1724),
and Machault (1760). Furthermore, a study of comparative
contemporary sites suggests the vessel was headed for the
eastern seaboard of what is presently the United States,
speciically the Hudson River Valley, for its typically Dutch
cargo compares well with archaeological collections from
upstate New York, and speciically the Dutch-American
settlement at Fort Orange (modern day Albany). The most
conspicuous artifacts on the site are the pipes and pipe
The Monte Cristi 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
fragments, the combined collection of which represents
the largest aggregation of smoking-related artifacts ever
recovered from a shipwreck, and possibly from any known
archaeological site. The pipes alone number close to ten
thousand, yet only two distinct types are represented in this
assemblage: those with barrel-shaped bowls – accounting for
approximately 93% of the assemblage — and the remainder
(7%) with bowls shaped like inverted cones, known as funnel
pipes. All are of Dutch manufacture and date to the middle
17th-century, and although the former were preferred by
Europeans and European-American colonists, funnel pipes
are clear imitations of Native American designs and were
intended for both the colonial and tribal trades.
demise of the ship: originally strung in hanks, these once
spherical beads are now slumped and fused into each other, a
phenomenon that occurs with intense heat lasting for a short
period of time. Along with charred wood and melted metal
globules, it appears that there may have been an explosion
on board, a scenario that archaeologists are studying with
considerable interest.
The wreck’s ceramic cargo is composed of Rhenish stoneware
from Germany and two varieties of glazed earthenware
that are likely Dutch in origin, all of which it well into
the aforementioned temporal framework. Fragments of
Westerwald pottery, as well as green-glazed and orangeglazed wares were also recovered, but in such small quantities
that they were likely ship’s wares rather than merchandise.
The Ship
Metal artifacts include numerous cooking cauldrons, an
assortment of tools, lead shot, and 27 silver coins from two
South American mints.
Glass shards of many different colors have been found, but
most interesting is a cluster of approximately 800 black glass
beads. These, in fact, possibly hold a tantalizing clue to the
Faunal remains indicate that sailors aboard the ship subsisted
on a diet of beef, pork, salted ish, and conch. Occasionally,
they competed with vermin for these foodstuffs, as evidenced
by animal bones that bear rat incisor marks. Olive pits and
other fruit stones appeared regularly in our dredge screens,
indicating that the shipboard diet was indeed varied.
Timber analysis indicates the vessel was constructed
sometime after 1642. The manner in which it was built and
the predominant wood types used in its construction suggest
England as the locus of production. The extant keel, frames
(N=17), outer planks (N=9), inner ceiling planks (N=6), and
treenails were all shaped from English oak. Additionally,
the hull was coated with tar and cow hair and covered with
softwood deals (thin, protective outer boards) of spruce or
larch, a measure common throughout the 17th-century to
protect a ship’s hulls from biological degradation caused by
teredo worms and bacteria.
Figure 2: Divers excavate and photograph the extant hull of the “Pipe Wreck”
The Monte Cristi
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figures 3, 4 and 5 (Left to Right): Example of a smoking pipe from the wreck site(left); Rhenish stoneware from the “Pipe Wreck,” with
the highly stylized Bartmänner, or bearded man face adorning the vessel’s neck (middle); and shoulder (right)
History Threatened, Yet Protected
This research has conirmed the value of archaeological
investigation in understanding the history and importance of
the “Pipe Wreck”. Although not all of our research questions
have been answered, these critical bits of information
reveal a 17th-century merchant vessel that carried a cargo
of European-manufactured trading goods, a part of which
may have been for Native American tribes of the eastern
seaboard of North America. Sailing during a period of
volatile competition between the English and Dutch for
maritime, mercantile, and military supremacy in both Europe
and the Americas, our ship passed along the northern coast
of Hispaniola, where historical sources suggest its crew may
have engaged in illicit trade with smugglers. Likewise, there
is strong evidence to suggest that this vessel entered the bay
in search of salt, as today the outskirts of Monte Cristi are
home to large, shallow evaporating pans. How far back this
practice reaches is lost in the historical and ethnographic
records, although Christopher Columbus noted at the close
of the 15th-century that the region held great potential for
salt production.
To ensure that the archaeological value of the “Pipe Wreck”
is protected against inclement weather and less-thanscrupulous tourists, its timbers have been buried beneath
a protective covering of tarpaulins, sandbags, and a meterthick layer of sand and coral rubble. The MCSP team
continues to work diligently with local oficials, ishing
boat operators, and tourist guides to inform them of the
importance of the “Pipe Wreck” to the regional history of
the island’s northern coast, enlisting their cooperation in
protecting one of the Dominican Republic’s most valuable
cultural resources.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Foundations in Management of Maritime
Cultural Heritage in the Cayman Islands
Margaret E. Leshikar-Denton
Cayman Islands National Museum
Cayman Islands
Defining Heritage Value
Beyond images of sand and sun, the Caribbean Sea is a real
place with an astounding cultural heritage. Pre-Columbian
peoples lived here, followed by historical explorers who made
discoveries, claimed territories and opened new avenues of
commerce. Treasure-laden Spanish leets attracted pirates,
while European nations sanctioned the activities of their
privateers. The sugar industry boomed, slavery abounded
and nations fought battles in what became a proxy European
theatre of war. Colonialism lourished, but as enslaved
peoples achieved freedom, local industry and identity took
root and developed into the world of today. Physical traces of
this colourful past exist in a wide range of Caribbean maritime
heritage sites such as anchorages, careening places, ports,
harbours, coastal settlements, shipbuilding sites, shipwrecks,
salvage camps, forts and lighthouses. These inite and nonrenewable cultural sites are signiicant to world history.
Shipwrecks, popularized by the quest for Spanish gold,
are among the most troubled Caribbean heritage sites.
Treasure-hunters have lured Caribbean countries into nonbeneicial salvage agreements, resulting in legal battles and
the destruction or public loss of heritage resources. While
treasure-hunting remains an active problem in the region,
some countries are experimenting with the notion that there
is more long-term value, proit, and public beneit in heritage
protection, management and interpretation than in entering
into compromising agreements with salvors. This is the
course embarked upon in the Cayman Islands.
Figure 1. The treacherous East
End reefs of Grand Cayman,
where more than 30 ships
have wrecked
(Dennis Denton)
Management of Maritime Cultural Heritage
Traditional and Creative Management Initiatives
The Cayman Islands are mountaintops that emerge abruptly
from the Western Caribbean Sea as landmarks and navigational
hazards. Archaeological surveys have failed to identify
remains of indigenous populations, but the earliest explorers
described diverse fauna. On 10 May 1503, Christopher
Columbus sighted Cayman Brac and Little Cayman,
identifying abundant sea turtles, while in April 1586 English
navigator Sir Francis Drake came ashore on Grand Cayman
where his hungry crew made meals of crocodiles and other
beasts. Early Spanish, Dutch, French and English seafarers
used the Islands as provisioning grounds, but after 1655
when the English occupied Jamaica, they also established
seasonal ishing encampments in the Cayman Islands. As
settlement became more permanent from the early 1700s, a
unique maritime culture emerged based largely on the turtleishing industry. Inluencing life and history, ships of at least
fourteen nationalities have wrecked on the treacherous reefs
of the three islands in the past 500 years.
Legal Protection for Shipwrecks
In the Cayman Islands, shipwrecks that have remained on
the seabed for more than 50 years are claimed under the
Abandoned Wreck Law (5 of 1966, 1997 Revision), with
ownership of artifacts “vested in Her Majesty in right of Her
Government of the Islands.” While blanket protection for
historical shipwrecks is admirable, the law is deicient in two
areas: 1) it does not recognize shipwrecks as cultural property
and 2) it was enacted to ensure that the government receives a
percentage of the value of articles recovered from shipwrecks,
and once the government enters into an agreement with a
prospector, it must return to the prospector at least one half of
Management of Maritime Cultural Heritage
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
underwater and maritime heritage management strategies in
the Cayman Islands. The premise is that knowledge inspires
appreciation among the public for cultural heritage sites, and
results in enlistment of allies in the guardianship of these
irreplaceable resources. Toward this end, the Museum, DoE,
Archive and Trust initiated a three-tiered approach to protect,
manage and interpret the Islands’ maritime heritage sites:
1) a land-based maritime heritage trail accessible to all 2) a
series of interpreted shipwreck preserves for the adventurous
aquatic public and 3) controlled management and research of
rare and sensitive sites.
Figures 2: Anchor on the Glamis site, planned as the first Cayman
Islands Shipwreck Preserve (Alexander Mustard)
Figure 3: Maritime Heritage Trail sign (M. Leshikar-Denton)
the value of the wreck. Fortunately, the Cayman Islands have
not entered into agreements with treasure hunters and have
determined that the Abandoned Wreck Law is inadequate to
protect and manage Cayman’s underwater cultural heritage.
Initiatives towards achieving new legislation began in the
early 1990s, but have been delayed. Thus, forthcoming
legislation has the advantage of taking into account recent
international initiatives such as the ICOMOS International
Charter on the Protection and Management of Underwater
Cultural Heritage (1996) and the UNESCO Convention on
the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage (2001).
An Inventory
In 1979-80 the Institute of Nautical Archaeology, under the
direction of Roger Smith with a ield team including the author,
conducted a survey for the Cayman Islands Government,
recording 77 maritime sites within the territorial waters of
the Cayman Islands. In more recent times, the database
has been enlarged to include 140 shipwrecks and additional
maritime sites, by the Cayman Islands National Museum,
with assistance from the Department of Environment (DoE),
National Archive, National Trust, visiting archaeologists and
volunteers. This National Shipwreck Inventory, developed
over the past 26 years, provides a sound basis for planning future
The Maritime Heritage Trail
The Cayman Islands Maritime Heritage Trail, created by a
partnership of the Museum, DoE, Archive and Trust, promotes
the Islands’ maritime legacy, combining heritage, education
and recreational tourism. Launched in 2003, the Trail took
inspiration from established and successful programmes in
Florida and Australia, and beneited from collaboration with
Della Scott-Ireton of the Florida Bureau of Archaeological
Research. The Trail is a land-based driving tour around
the three Cayman Islands with 36 stops marked by signs at
historically signiicant maritime sites. Two colorful poster/
brochures, one for the Sister Islands (Cayman Brac and Little
Cayman) and one for Grand Cayman, interpret the Trail
for explorers. Visitors learn in a fun and interactive way
about a variety of maritime themes, activities, and industries
unique to the Cayman Islands, such as maritime place names,
lighthouses, maritime architecture, shipbuilding, hurricane
caves, forts, turtle ishing, anchorages, early explorers,
maritime activities, and shipwrecks.
The Partners developed a set of criteria for selecting sites
appropriate for inclusion on the Trail. The Trail stops have
historical signiicance, comprise multiple maritime themes,
do not adversely impact sensitive sites, include all three
Cayman Islands, provide a safe and entertaining activity, and
highlight interesting visual features with safe and publicly
accessible viewing areas. Designed to have multiple values,
the Trail is uniquely Caymanian and encourages a sense of
national pride in existing maritime heritage resources. It is
a widely accessible, land-based attraction that encourages
travel around the coastlines of all three islands, thereby
enhancing the local economy. It encourages public visitation
and appreciation of heritage sites, resulting in stewardship
of these resources. As the irst of its kind in the Caribbean
region, the Cayman Islands Maritime Heritage Trail can serve
as a model for the interpretation and protection of maritime
cultural resources in other Caribbean nations.
Shipwreck Preserves
The second initiative in Cayman’s multi-phase program
to promote and protect maritime cultural resources is
establishment of a series of Shipwreck Preserves in the waters
of all three islands. For inspiration and practical knowledge,
the Maritime Partners again looked to models in Florida
and Australia, as well as other states and the United States
National Marine Sanctuaries. They formulated draft criteria
Management of Maritime Cultural Heritage
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
for sites in the Preserve system: a wreck must be located
in Cayman’s territorial seas or in the contiguous zone, be
historically signiicant, have a reasonably veriiable identity
and history, have recognizable features, be environmentally
healthy and stable, be robust enough to withstand sustained
visitation without compromising archaeological integrity, be
accessible to the public, and have safe visitation conditions.
The irst Cayman Islands Shipwreck Preserve is planned for
the site of the iron-hulled barque Glamis, built in Dundee,
Scotland, in 1876 and wrecked under Norwegian lag in
1913. The site, composed of large sections of iron hull
fragments, anchors and multiple sailing-ship deck features
and located in a shallow clear-water reef environment off the
East End of Grand Cayman, has been mapped by the Museum
in collaboration with students from the Anthropology
Department of Florida State University, including graduate
student Bert Ho, with logistical support from DoE and East
End dive operators. Interpretive materials will comprise
a bronze marker set in cement on the seabed, a laminated
underwater guide for site visitors, and a topside brochure
featuring the ship’s history and dramatic wrecking event.
Sites like Glamis, that are structurally stable, located in a
healthy environment, and whose histories are known, are
appropriate for in situ interpretation, where appropriate
access is beneicial for the resource and the adventurous
public. The Preserves, representing a variety of shipwrecks
managed, interpreted and legally protected for the beneit of
the public, will be thematically linked as the Cayman Islands
Shipwreck Preserve Trail.
Rare and Sensitive Sites
Once people interact with history through the Maritime
Heritage Trail and Shipwreck Preserves, they will better
appreciate and understand that some sites are sensitive and
fragile, and might include information available nowhere
else in the world. These rare sites deserve special protection,
management and study. Research can result in publications,
museum exhibitions and ilmed documentaries, whereby
people are invited to share knowledge that is extracted from
these special sites by professional archaeologists. While in situ
preservation should always be considered as a irst option for
shipwrecks, if intervention is planned for research purposes
or mitigation, a whole range of responsibilities comes into
play, among which are demands for funding, professional
expertise and documentation, conservation, site stabilisation,
collections management and curation, and dissemination
of information to the public. Presently, no shipwrecks are
under archaeological excavation in the Cayman Islands.
There are, however, signiicant early heritage sites located
in the Islands that deserve archaeological attention. For
instance, in Grand Cayman HMS Jamaica, a British sloop
on patrol for pirates, was lost in 1715. An unidentiied 16th17th century wreck of unknown nationality was found on
the East End reef, and a mid-18th-century Spanish wreck
characterized by a wide range of ceramic material has been
discovered. The Duck Pond careenage, active for centuries,
still survives in a relatively undisturbed state. The Wreck of
the Ten Sail, comprising the frigate HMS Convert and nine
of her merchant convoy were lost together in 1794. Among
sites worthy of specialized archaeological research in the
Sister Islands are English vessels lost during a 1670 battle
with privateer Manuel Rivero Pardal, a late-17th-century
shipwreck of undetermined nationality, and the San Miguel,
wrecked in 1730.
Conclusion
Much has been accomplished to lay a foundation for
protection and management of maritime heritage sites in the
Cayman Islands over the past quarter century. Traditional and
creative management strategies have been initiated, but need
to be completed and/or maintained, including a new law for
underwater cultural heritage, the shipwreck and maritime site
inventory, the Maritime Heritage Trail, Shipwreck Preserves,
and protection and research into rare and sensitive maritime
sites. The Cayman Islands are in a perfect position to build
upon their prior achievements, and to contribute to wider
public knowledge, protection, management and appreciation
of the maritime heritage of the Cayman Islands. It will be a
service not only to the Cayman Islands, but to the Caribbean
region and to world history.
Figure 4: Grand Cayman Maritime Heritage Trail poster/brochure
front (Courtesy Cayman Islands Maritime Heritage Trail Partners)
The Long Struggle of Santa Fé
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Long Struggle between
Santa Fé and the San Javier River
Javier García Cano
Head of Underwater Cultural Heritage Program
University of Buenos Aires
Argentina
Introduction
In 1573, a group of Spaniards founded the city of Santa Fé La
Vieja, by the San Javier river (part of the luvial system of the
great Paraná river), today in Argentinean territory but at that
time part of the Virreinato of Peru, the southern portion of the
Spanish Empire in America.
This article deals with the archaeological site resulting from
this settlement, and reviews how the natural action of the
river in relation to the site’s topography represents a clear
situation of “heritage at risk,” imperilling both the terrestrial
portion as well as submerged elements of the site.
Location
The site known as “Santa Fé La Vieja” is situated in the
central region of the present Province of Santa Fé (see
maps.) The surrounding landscape basically consists of lat
lowlands with some very subtle undulations, a formation
known as albardones (terraces) when located next to rivers.
The existence of this geomorphology gave rise to the location
of the settlement, as it allowed the city to be built next to
the river. Access to the San Javier River, the only available
communication channel, made survival, in its most absolute
and integral sense, possible for the population. The river
facilitated travel, commerce, food supply, and constituted a
means of defence.
Figure 1: Localisation
The settlement’s position on the terraces also offered
protection from the river’s lood cycles. Depending on
seasonal rain conditions, Santa Fé was frequently totally
surrounded by water, resulting from the raised river level.
Whilst the settlement itself was safe from looding, it
became temporarily isolated from the surrounding lower
countryside.
The permanent low of water over this terrain made of clay
and sand causes constant erosion, and therefore changes to
the riverbanks. This systematic cycle of looding creates
an erosive process and the transportation and deposition of
geological materials. The city of Santa Fé was affected by this
never-ending erosive action for which there is no permanent
solution. The river and the topography led to the founding of
the city; however, they also led to its loss.
Santa Fé
Juan de Garay founded the city of Santa Fé. Sailing down the
river from the already established city of Asunción (1537),
he decided to create a permanent settlement, intended as a
mid-way resting point to the ocean and then on to Spain.
In principle, with this objective of territorial control and
consolidation of the European presence, Santa Fé was a city
with a European population from several origins (Spanish,
Venetians, Germans, and Portuguese) as well as local
indigenous inhabitants and black Africans. The city grew,
remaining in its original location, until 1690.
The repeated looding of the river and the resulting periods
of isolation together with the erosion process of the terraces
banks created dificult living conditions. The city started to
suffer the loss of dry land, especially along the river front,
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Long Struggle of Santa Fé
Figure 2: Archaeologic site and
the San Javier River; erosion
zone marked in black
where the blocks near the river were gradually collapsing
into the water. This slow, but continuous, process led to
Santa Fé losing several main buildings and land lots, which
had played a central role since the city’s founding, and often
belonged to the more inluential citizens and groups. In this
way, the city’s own founder, Juan de Garay, lost his house,
and the city square survived till the present (2006) with only
50% of its original surface area (see plan). Furthermore, three
of Santa Fé’s ive churches were lost to the constant erosive
action produced by the river (see map of the city in its actual
situation).
Understanding that this process was irreversible and
progressive, the population decided to move the city to a new
location 85 km south, by the central branch of the Paraná
River (main river of the system and one of the largest in the
world). In this new location, the city was re-founded, but
under the name of “Santa Fé de la Veracruz.” Beginning in
1690, the new settlement copied perfectly the distribution of
the lots and the design of the old city.
action (the human presence during the city’s life) and passive
action (abandonment), both basically determining the
remains found in the ground. Simultaneously, the river has
transported material deposited in dry ground into the water.
The process had and has no end. It could be said that this is
a case of permanent “mutation” of a combined “terrestrial
and underwater” site into an underwater site, if the erosive
process of the San Javier River were never to stop. It is clear
that from the founding of this settlement, the interaction
between man and his environment has been the basis for the
formation of a site with two faces (terrestrial and underwater).
However it is also clear that this site acquires its identity as
an archaeological site starting from a speciic moment and
due to the continuity of a natural action.
Archaeological Site Formation
In 1949, Dr. Zapata Gollán, after several years of searching
for the remains of the irst Santa Fe, located the city and
began his research according to archaeological methodology.
From the outset, Gollán was aware of the problems the river
erosion posed to the site and its determining effects on the
existence and deterioration of the remains. In 1995, a iveyear project concerning the site’s underwater archaeology
began under the direction of Mónica Valentini.
It is clear that due to the permanent action of the river, the
city was in constant danger and that cultural material from the
occupied dry land was transported into the river bed. It would
therefore be possible to afirm that the archaeological site
known today as “Santa Fé La Vieja” existed from the beginning
of the European occupation. It should be remembered that the
city underwent a process of abandonment and re-founding
in a second location. This process obliged the population to
reuse as much material as possible in the new city. It thus
deines the formation of an archaeological site with a natural
process of erosion and re-deposit of material together with
the sudden removal of all materials that could have been
reused in the second location. The irst part of the process
has not, however, inished, and continues even today. This
has lead to an archaeological site formed by active anthropic
The underwater archaeology project resulted, among
otherthings, in an understanding of the natural auto-migration
process of the San Javier River, and how this process affected
and continues to affect both the terrestrial and underwater
archaeological remains. The project also was able to
establish the speed of the erosive process and to measure its
magnitude—information which is of the utmost importance
for the future conservation of the site. It determined that
while the site is threatened by several problems, the evolution
of the San Javier River is the most signiicant. It exerts a
major impact on the site of Santa Fé La Vieja (as much as
in the days when it was inhabited) which contains the only
existing remains of a sixteenth-to-seventeenth century
Spanish colonial city in America, and which was abandoned
after almost 100 years of use.
The Long Struggle of Santa Fé
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 3: Erosion of the San
Javier river banks; the map
shows the area lost due to
erosion
At the same time, the project illustrated the site’s indivisible
relationship with the river. Not until this project was carried
out were archaeological remains in Argentina seen as being
the direct results of the interaction between humans and
their environment. In general, previous archaeological
investigations did not include studies of waterways or basins,
and in this manner they often missed the fundamental reasons
that a city’s inhabitants chose to settle in a speciic place and
lacked an understanding of their subsequent relationship with
their environment.
World Heritage List Nomination
Given the importance of the site of Santa Fé la Vieja, the
provincial authorities decided to initiate the World Heritage
List nomination process, according to the UNESCO World
Heritage Convention. Argentina, a signatory country of the
Convention, began working on the nomination dossier. Yet
at the moment, this process is complicated by the very threats
that the site faces. In fact, the main issue is to determine
how to mitigate the erosive process of the terraces and the
site as a whole. Though many attempts have been made to
consolidate the banks and the terraces in an effort to at least
minimize the erosion, none of these have achieved any stable
or lasting results.
Conclusion
It is clear that this site possesses suficient value on a local,
continental, and international level so as to provide an
outstanding example to the world of European colonization
in the Americas. Yet this status is threatened by natural
processes, and therefore this site must inevitably be seen as
“Heritage at risk.” Santa Fé La Vieja is also distinctive in that
it is not exclusively an underwater site; it derives some of its
complexity from encompassing both a land and water phase.
How can we reconcile the fact that the same elements which
created it and today allow us to read into its past are also
those that are threatening its very existence. The challenge
lies in the struggle to continue being able to read from this
site, a struggle against nature.
Information Sources
García Cano, Javier. 2000. “Estudio de la porción sumergida de
una fundación española del siglo XVI. Arqueología Subacuática
de las Ruinas de Santa Fe La Vieja, un enfoque metodológico”.
En “Crítica 2000”. Instituto de Arte Americano e Investigaciones
Estéticas “Mario J. Buschiazzo”, Facultad de Arquitectura, Diseño
y Urbanismo, Universidad de Buenos Aires. N°110, Buenos Aires,
Argentina.
García Cano, Javier. 2001. “Las ciudades históricas como sitios
integrales. Los Casos de Santa Fe La Vieja (1573-1660) y Federación
(1810-1847-1979). Seminario Internacional de Ciudades Históricas
Iberoamericanas. ICOMOS España e CIHIB. Ciudad de Toledo,
España.
Valentini, M. Y J. García Cano .“El registro arqueológico
subacuático como un componente necesario para obtener un análisis
integral de sitios en regiones con importante presencia de cuencas
acuíferas”. En Signos en el tiempo y rastros en la tierra. III Jornadas
de Arqueología e Historia de las regiones Pampena y Patagónica.
Mariano Ramos y Eugenia Néspolo Editores. Departamento de
Ciencias Sociales. Universidad Nacional de Lujan. Páginas 271276. ISBN 987-9285-18-2.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Pre-Colonial Fish Traps
On the South Western Cape Coast, South Africa
John Gribble
Wessex Archaeology, United Kingdom
(Formerly Maritime Archaeologist,
South African Heritage Resources Agency)
Stretching for more than 400km, from the Cape Peninsula
in the west to beyond the harbour town of Mossel Bay in
the east, the South Western Cape coast of South Africa is
lined with stone ish traps. Built by the area’s pre-colonial
inhabitants, these traps are a special feature of this coast and
have been reported along much of its length.
Although an important part of South Africa’s maritime
cultural heritage, the ish traps have a surprisingly low public
and archaeological proile. Relatively few people know of
their existence, and they have only been discussed in two
archaeological papers, the irst published in 1946 (Goodwin)
and the other in 1975 (Avery). No other systematic work
has been undertaken to survey and record these sites and
their distribution, to establish their age, or to investigate
their archaeological associations. In 2004, however, the
National Survey of Underwater Heritage (NSUH) started
systematically locating and recording the ish traps, in part as
a response to the real and potential threats to these sites. This
survey was a project of the South African Heritage Resources
Agency (SAHRA) funded by a grant from the National
Lotteries Distribution Trust Fund.
Pre-Colonial Fish Traps
– 3000 years (Avery 1975). However, a means of dating the
ish traps absolutely has yet to be found and thus the dating
of these sites remains tenuous and open to question. It is
possible that the technology of building ish traps is older
than the postulated dates and that earlier evidence of their use
was inundated as sea levels rose from their late Pleistocene
lows about 15,000 years ago.
Stone ish traps have been recorded at De Hoop, Skipskop,
Struis Point, Struis Bay Harbour, Cape Agulhas and further
west towards Pearly Beach and Danger Point. There are
indications that there may be ish traps at Slangkop and
Kommetjie on the Cape Peninsula. Sources have also
reported an occurrence at Vlaminck Vlei near the mouth of
the Berg River on the West Coast and possibly also on the
Alexandria Coast northeast of Port Elizabeth in the Eastern
Cape. Recent work by the NSUH has conirmed the presence
of eleven clusters of ish traps in the area between Still Bay
and Mossel Bay.
The traps were constructed and utilized by pre-colonial
hunter-gatherer communities and to a large extent fell out of
use as the indigenous population of the area was displaced
by the European settlers during the 18th-century. In a few
instances, however, the descendants of both these indigenous
populations and the European settlers still maintain and use
some of the traps.
The heritage signiicance of these ish traps is clear, and was to
some extent oficially acknowledged with the declaration of
one of the ish trap concentrations near Still Bay as a national
monument in the 1980s. In general though, they remain little
understood and, although protected by the National Heritage
Resources Act (25 of 2000), are at risk of damage or even
destruction.
From an archaeological perspective, the ish traps are
important as they represent arguably the oldest extant working
technology in South Africa. The investment of time and
labour involved in building and maintaining these structures
suggests the aggregation of small hunter-gatherer groups at
certain times of the year or month to pool their labour for
mutual beneit. The traps therefore also offer tantalizing
suggestions regarding the co-operation between huntergatherer groups to collectively exploit marine resources.
South Coast Fish Traps
What are They?
It is clear from the archaeological remains – shell middens,
deep stratiied cave deposits, rock art and the ish traps – that
marine resources have a long history of human exploitation
along South Africa’s coast. Shell middens are plentiful and in
some instances date back more than 100,000 years, well into
the Middle Stone Age.
The South Western Cape coast ish traps are essentially
artiicial rock pools consisting of low, stone walls built from
beach cobbles and rocks available on site. The positioning
of the traps and the form and proile of the walls themselves,
indicate that their builders had a sound understanding of
shoreline dynamics and the fundamentals of engineering.
Stone ish traps are found adjacent to many middens on the
South Western Cape coast and John Goodwin, one of the
fathers of South African archaeology, was the irst to propose
in 1946 that there was a relationship between some of the
middens and the traps. He suggested that the sudden increase
of ish remains in Later Stone Age levels at Oakhurst Shelter
could point to the inception of the use of ish traps, although
he was unable to ix a date for this event.
The traps are generally located in the inter-tidal zone on
shallow rocky platforms overlain with loose rock, cobbles
or boulders. These wide platforms effectively increase the
size and extent of the inter-tidal zone and, because they are
shallow with a gentle slope, are generally subject to less
dynamic wave action.
Sea level data generated since then suggests that the traps
presently visible in the inter-tidal zone date to the last 2000
The packed walls are constructed of loose rock cleared
from the rocky substrate usually forming a series of linked
semicircles, and were built to a height that allowed them to
be inundated twice a month at spring high tide. Alternatively,
0
Pre-Colonial Fish Traps
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 1: Geelkrans, near Still Bay; fish traps from the air; note the trap walls and the substantial packed tongue of
rocks on the left
Figure 2: Noordkapper Point, Still Bay; these traps are still maintained and used by a group of local farmers
Pre-Colonial Fish Traps 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 3: Noordkapper Point, Still Bay; aerial view
of trap complex showing unmaintained pre-colonial
traps in foreground
natural gullies in the bedrock were utilised by simply being
dammed with rock walls to the height of the surrounding
bedrock.
The proile of the walls is interesting too. Their inner faces
are vertical, making it more dificult for ish to escape once
in the pools, while the outer or seaward faces are sloped. This
serves the dual purpose of providing less resistance to the
force of the surf while at the same time providing an easy
entry for the ish. Fish swim or are washed over the walls
at spring high tide and remain trapped in the pools behind
the walls as the tide recedes, where they can be more easily
collected by people.
Threats
Most of the identiied ish traps are no longer in use, and their
walls have collapsed. Despite centuries of neglect, most of
the traps still retain their spatial integrity and their extent and
character is easily discernable. They are however subject to
an increasing range of impacts that threaten their survival,
and these are largely the result of increased human pressure
on the coast and its resources.
Coastal developments have increased the population in the
areas these traps occur. This has exposed the traps to human
interference which ranges from damage by ishermen who
break down walls looking for bait, to the destruction of traps
for the construction of harbours or even their conversion into
tidal swimming pools. There is also a degree of unintentional
damage to the traps simply caused by public ignorance of
their existence and importance. Most of these threats can
be managed by increasing public awareness of the traps, and
by encouraging local coastal communities to understand their
signiicance and importance and to take ownership of “their” traps.
A recent potential threat to some of the ish traps has arisen
as the result of South Africa’s growing tourism, particularly
its eco-tourism industry. In a number of places along the
South Western Cape coast, local communities and tourism
operators have proposed the rebuilding and reuse of ish traps.
This raises complex issues about the reuse of archaeological
heritage, and poses questions about whether the re-building
and reuse of traps would compromise their archaeological
integrity. At the same time the argument is made that the
reuse of sites such as these has a positive educational role,
will raise public awareness about the need to preserve such
sites, and should be encouraged. The answer probably lies
somewhere in the middle, and will need to be debated and
negotiated by the heritage sector, tourism operators and local
communities.
Conclusion
The current work by the NSUH should result in a complete
record of the South Western Cape Coast’s existing stone
ish traps, their range, extent, location and condition. This
information will form the basis for decisions regarding the
future conservation, protection and possible reuse of these
important pre-colonial sites, and will also add to our sum of
knowledge about this oldest extant, yet barely understood
indigenous technology.
At the same time, the NSUH is conident that the considerable
public interest the surveys of the ish traps have generated in
the areas where they have been undertaken will also be seen
in other areas. If the surveys can contribute to the creation of
a local community interest in and concern for its maritime
archaeological heritage they will have contributed to the
conservation and protection of these important sites.
Information Sources
Avery G. 1975. Discussion on the age and use of tidal ish-traps.
South African Archaeological Bulletin 30:105-113.
Goodwin, AJH. 1946. Prehistoric ishing methods in South Africa.
Antiquity 20:1-8.
Protected Zones and Partnerships
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Protected Zones and Partnerships:
Their Application and Importance to Underwater Cultural Heritage Management
David Nutley
Underwater Cultural Heritage Program
New South Wales Heritage Ofice
Australia
The Steam Collier Myola 1919
The Myola, a steam collier built in 1913, sprang a leak on
the 2nd April 1919 and foundered off Sydney’s northern
beaches.
The wreck of the Myola was discovered by recreational divers
in July 1994. The site was protected as an historic shipwreck
under the Australian Government’s Historic Shipwrecks Act
1976. However, a recommendation for the declaration of
a Protected Zone around the site was not supported by the
Minister responsible. Although the majority of divers strove
to protect the site, signiicant damage was inlicted on the site.
This has signiicantly reduced its archaeological potential as
well as its visual appeal and subsequent recreational activity.
The failure of this site to be adequately protected sits in
contrast with another collier, the Lady Darling, a much
shallower site on the New South Wales south coast.
The Steam Collier Lady Darling 1880
The Lady Darling foundered in 1880 but was located on16
August, 1996 after a trawl net became snagged. On the
19 August, divers freed the net, found the wreck site and
promptly notiied the New South Wales Heritage Ofice.
Heritage Ofice archaeologists then visited the site to
establish its identity and location. These inspections revealed
no signs of prior visitation by divers or previous damage by
trawl nets. The professional isherman who hooked up on the
wreck leading to its discovery was unsure why his nets fouled
in an area thought to be barren. A few isolated ishing weights
have been identiied however, indicating that some limited
line ishing has occurred over the site.
Wreck Site Description
The stern and midships remain intact as does the heavy
engine and boiler. The decks, deck beams and hull sides
have collapsed where they are not supported by bulkheads.
With the loss of support, the bow, a relatively strong unit, has
broken away from the hull. The bow has pivoted along the
keel line and collapsed to starboard, due to the breakdown of
the hull sides aft. The structurally strong stern of the Lady
Darling stands intact to near the upper deck level. Forward
of the stern bulkhead, the hull sides have disintegrated to
approximately the level of the surrounding sand. The engine
room area itself is discernable only by the positioning of the
engine and boiler. Two vertical stanchions are visible forward
of the boiler and mark the centreline of the hull. They probably
served to support the upper deck. This was the main cargo
area of the steamer, and with few structural supports in this
region, the hull sides have been severely reduced.
All ittings associated with the bow have tumbled outside
of the hull and lie to starboard, following the direction of
collapse. These include an Admiralty and Porters Patent
anchor, the Patent Capstan, a davit, anchor chain and a
collection of tumbled deck beams. In the midships region,
the donkey boiler, a winch and timber rigging deadeyes, have
fallen just outside the hull to starboard. The remainder of the
visible relics have fallen within the area limited by the hull.
In the stern area, these include a ship’s lantern, crockery,
deck beams and other structural elements. Towards the bow
is a mound of anchor and chain, and the remains of the iron
collars which probably supported the forward mast.
Other identiiable features are expected to survive beneath
present sand levels, particularly forward of the boiler, the
Figure 1: Lady Darling wreck – from stern
to boiler at midships (D. Nutley)
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Protected Zones and Partnerships
presumed area of the bridge. Sand levels are likely to vary
over the site due to storm and swell activity, with buried
structure becoming exposed at certain times. This body of
sand is actively helping to preserve the structural remains and
other artefacts that form this site.
Legislative Protection
Shipwrecks along the Australian coast are protected by
legislation which aims to conserve sites, while encouraging
public access.
Shipwrecks lost more than 75 years ago are protected from
interference or damage by the Historic Shipwrecks Act, 1976.
The Lady Darling has additional legislative protecting it
through a Protected Zone placed around the wreck site under
section 7 of the Act. A permit is required from the Heritage
Ofice to visit these exclusion zones.
Site Management
The Lady Darling site has been assessed as an important
local reminder of the dangers of coastal maritime trade in the
19th-century. Its engine and associated machinery survive
as a rare Australian example of a speciic development
period in marine engineering last century. The shipwreck
and its associated in situ artefacts retain high recreational
importance as the most intact shipwreck for diver visitation
in the Eurobodalla Shire region.
On this basis the Heritage Ofice developed a management
strategy to ensure the retention of these values, while also
fostering public access. Experiences with the discovery of the
ss Myola were a critical factor in the desire by the Heritage
Ofice to seek a workable management solution to maintain
the integrity of the site.
Expectations were that the Lady Darling would be a well
sought-after recreational dive site, especially amongst the
wreck diving component of the sports diving fraternity. This
was despite its relative isolation away from a major urban
centre like Sydney. The relative isolation of the site also
meant that effective policing of visitation was dificult.
Development of a site management strategy
With the support of the inders of the wreck site, a 150 metres
radius Protected Zone was established around the wreck site.
This enabled visitation through a permit system and more
detailed examination by the Heritage Ofice.
Discussions with the charter boat operators focused on
protection of the Lady Darling wreck, access arrangements and
the potential to work jointly to manage the site. A permanent
sub-surface mooring system was devised to enable visitation
to the site without the threat of inadvertent anchor damage
occurring. The mooring design consists of two vertical lines
weighted to the sealoor. In the case of the Lady Darling,
railway wheels have been utilised, but chained segments of
railway line could also be used instead of or added to the
railway wheels. The vertical stands are connected some ten
Figure 2: Configuration of Lady Darling mooring system
(New South Wales Heritage Office)
metres below the surface by a horizontal positively buoyant
line. Mooring vessels approach the mooring with a grapnel,
hook up on the horizontal line and secure it to the boat. The
mooring stands either side of the shipwreck to enable eficient
entry and exit points for divers.
In line with the Heritage Ofice’s commitment to
acknowledge and publicise signiicant contributions to the
Historic Shipwrecks Program in NSW, the award of Finder’s
Recognition Plaques was arranged for 26 March, 1997.
This date enabled the presentation of these awards to the
two inders, by the Chair of the Heritage Council of NSW,
assisted by the General Manager of the Local Council, and
the Narooma Coastal Patrol.
The Heritage Ofice assisted Local Council to design a
bronze outdoor interpretative plaque. Council also funded the
production of ive separate plaques detailing the protection
and access conditions applicable to the site. These were
mounted at all local boat ramps and slips. The location of
the Lady Darling Historic Shipwreck was added to the third
of the Ofice’s Shipwreck Atlas of NSW, oficially launched
at the ceremony, and the Council’s interpretative plaque is
included in the Heritage Ofice’s Maritime Heritage Online
website’s Signs and Trails section (http://maritime.heritage.
nsw.gov.au).
Outcomes of the management strategy
The success of the management approach is conirmed by the
number of divers visiting the site and its state of preservation.
During the initial period alone (August 1996 - June 1997),
a total of 448 divers visited the Lady Darling wreck site in
61 visits. The seven permit holders applied for and received
permits for the 1997-8 year. During this period, 597 divers
visited the site in 76 separate visits — a total of 1,045 divers
in the 22 months since discovery.
To date there have been no reports or evidence of artefacts
removal from the site. This is a remarkable outcome. It relects
the result of prompt notiication, control and the contribution
of permit holders in monitoring diving operations at the site.
It is an encouraging success story. There is no other iron
Protected Zones and Partnerships
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
items removed, the level of conservation required and
the preparation or construction of suitable storage and
display facilities could be considerable.
Figure 3: The plaque - funded by the Eurobodella Shire Council
(D. Nutley)
shipwreck in Australia as accessible and as frequently visited
as the Lady Darling that is as intact and as attractive as the
day it was found.
The Heritage Ofice has received requests for artefacts to be
removed from the site in order to safeguard these items and
to make the site less attractive to looters. In response, the
Heritage Ofice developed the following advice to assist users
of this site to understand the link between archaeological
integrity and recreational appeal:
•
•
The site has become a signiicant facet of dive tourism
in the Narooma and Bermagui district. The retention of
the site’s tourism potential is closely associated with
its retention of its archaeological potential. The appeal
of the site is enhanced by the knowledge that it has
not been ‘picked over’ either by souvenir hunters or
archaeologists. Divers can experience this enhancement
either by actually seeing a porthole, dead-eye or ceramic
plates on site, or by being aware that these items are
somewhere hidden under the sand. Where these items
become visible, good quality photographic records can
be compiled to enable non-divers to experience the
visual context of these elements of a diving experience.
Removal would deplete the signiicance of the site and
would be accompanied by a very high level of cost.
This cost, depending on the quantity and nature of the
•
The removal of artefacts from the site would not only
reduce its appeal as a dive destination but would remove
conditions that lead to the establishment of the current
permit system. The site would then be indistinguishable
from dozens of other iron shipwreck sites on the NSW
coast — none of which control access through a permit
system like that on the Lady Darling.
•
Removal of the site’s artefacts, such as portholes,
lanterns, ceramics, dead-eyes, etc would remove much
of the justiication for tightly control access conditions.
•
The above issues need to be considered in any proposals
for archaeological excavation or other removal of
artefacts from the site.
This advice was supplied to the permit holders and has
assisted them in dealing with these inquiries also.
The management of the Lady Darling site has been a
successful partnership. This partnership has included the
local dive industry, local council, other key interest groups
as well as the State Government through the NSW Heritage
Ofice and the Australian Government through the Historic
Shipwrecks Program. Most importantly, the system could not
work so effectively without local interest in historical values
and long term recreational viability of this site. It is this sense
of partnership that is critical to the successful implementation
of the UNESCO Convention for the underwater cultural
heritage.
Information Sources
Myola Information Sheet, NSW Heritage Ofice 2004, ISBN 1
876415 711
Smith, T and Nutley, D, September 1998, ss Lady Darling (1864 1880) Wreck Inspection Report, NSW Heritage Ofice, Sydney.
Maritime Heritage Online <http://maritime.heritage.nsw.gov.au>
Shipwreck Atlas of New South Wales, 3rd edition, 1996, NSW
Heritage Ofice, Parramatta.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Old Shipwrecks and New Dredging:
An Elizabethan Ship in the Thames
Old Shipwrecks and New Dredging
Antony Firth
Head of Coastal and Marine Projects
Wessex Archaeology
United Kingdom
It is no accident that new dredging for historic ports can result
in discoveries of old shipwrecks. In this recent case, a UK
port authority has worked with archaeologists and heritage
agencies to successfully reconcile the needs of the historic
environment with the commercial need for ports to improve
navigation by dredging.
Seafaring in the Thames Estuary stretches back several
millennia, serving London and the coasts of Kent and Essex.
The Thames Estuary continues to be hugely important for
shipping, and is the responsibility of the Port of London
Authority (PLA). Shipping routes in the outer estuary are
restricted to channels between many large and dynamic
sandbanks. The PLA has been seeking to improve access to
the south by dredging one of these channels, Princes Channel,
to make up for sand movements that are blocking previouslyfavoured channels.
A pre-dredging magnetometer survey in April 2003 showed
an anomaly in the Princes Channel that was inspected by
the PLA’s own diving team in May 2003. The source of the
anomaly was identiied as a wreck, but it was thought to be
a barge like the many other barges from the 19th and 20th
centuries that can be found as decaying hulks all around the
coasts of Kent and Essex. Like many UK port authorities, the
PLA has not merely a right but an obligation to remove wrecks,
of whatever age, if they present a hazard to navigation. These
powers can override statutory heritage designations.
Unsuccessful attempts were made to disperse the wreck in
June 2003 when some iron bars were recovered, so heavier
equipment was called in and the wreck was cleared by
grabbing in July 2003. Preliminary dredging operations,
which had been excluded from the area of the wreck to
avoid damage to dredging equipment, were then allowed to
take place throughout the area. However, at this point it was
realised that the debris from the grabbing included not only
ship’s timbers and iron bars, but also an anchor and a cannon.
Recognising that this was possibly not just the wreck of an
old barge, the PLA contacted Wessex Archaeology (WA),
a not-for-proit charity, which carries out archaeological
investigations for commercial developers, for assistance.
Following a brief inspection of the recovered material, which
noted a possible second cannon, remedial archaeological
recording was carried out. It was concluded that the remains
were of a vessel up to 200 ton burden constructed between
1600 and 1850.
The PLA believed that the wreck had been completely
recovered or dispersed, but a bathymetric survey to monitor
the results of the channel dredging in October 2003 identiied
some ‘high spots’ in the vicinity of the wreck. A further diving
Figure 1: Part of a leather garment or jerkin excavated from the
Princes Channel wreck
inspection by the PLA established that there was another
piece of wooden wreckage. WA was commissioned to carry
out an archaeological diving inspection, which conirmed
the presence of a section of hull. A brief sidescan survey
directed by WA on the same day also showed that there was
yet further wreckage present, which probably represented
the original site. As the section of hull was thought to be a
hazard to navigation in the shallow channel, the PLA took
the decision to recover it. The recovery took place later in
November 2003, with WA staff in attendance. WA staff then
carried out a diving inspection of what was thought to be the
original site, which conirmed the presence of two sections
of hull structure, partly covered by iron bars. A fragment of a
Spanish olive jar was recovered.
In January 2004, the section of hull recovered in November
was recorded in detail. Elements of the construction suggested
that the ship was built in the 16th century, and possible
Iberian inluences were noted. Dendrochronological analysis
indicated a building date in or shortly after AD 1574 and that
the most likely source of the timbers was eastern England,
particularly East Anglia and Essex. By this stage it was clear
that not only was the wreck of considerable archaeological
interest, but also that it needed to be entirely removed if the
proposed dredging operations were to continue.
Attention turned to the further information required in order
to design an archaeological mitigation strategy to accompany
recovery of the remaining wreckage. A high-resolution
sidescan survey of the site was undertaken by WA, which
resulted in a geo-referenced mosaic that was used to plan
operations and to identify targets around the main site. A
further archaeological diving inspection, informed by the
high-resolution survey, was undertaken to assess the overall
disposition of major structural elements and to assess the
presence and distribution of artefacts. The results of all these
investigations were presented in an evaluation report, and a
Project Design for the archaeological mitigation works was
Old Shipwrecks and New Dredging
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 2: A section of the lower port side of the hull of the Princes Channel wreck, onboard a PLA salvage barge
Figure 3: Digital record of one of the hull sections from the Princes Channel wreck
Old Shipwrecks and New Dredging
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
prepared. The overall approach combined outline recording
of structural remains on the seabed with detailed digital
recording of recovered structure once onshore, all within the
context of an explicit research strategy. The Project Design
was prepared in accordance with the ICOMOS Charter on
the Protection and Management of the Underwater Cultural
Heritage 1996, which formed the basis for the Rules of the
Annex of the 2001 UNESCO Convention, and other relevant
professional standards. English Heritage had been informed
and consulted on various aspects of the investigations
throughout the process, and they approved the Project
Design.
Diving operations were severely hampered by weather, taking
place on eighteen days from mid-August to mid-October
2004 using a WA team supported by PLA divers, vessels and
crews. As well as hull structure – including a rare section of
ship’s stem – a range of artefacts including iron bars, lead
and tin ingots, two further cannon and personal effects were
surveyed and recovered. Environmental samples were also
obtained. All of the hull sections have been transferred to the
care of the Nautical Archaeology Society (NAS) and placed
in a brackish lagoon near Portsmouth where they are being
used for training purposes. The cannon are in the care of
the Royal Armouries, and arrangements are being made to
conserve the assemblage of small inds.
A full analysis is yet to be carried out, but a number of
conclusions about the vessel can be drawn. The wreck is of a
16th century armed merchantman that was carrying iron, lead
and tin. Although certain elements of the construction suggest
a Mediterranean or Iberian inluence, dendrochronological
analysis demonstrates that the ship was built in England, most
likely Essex or East Anglia, in or just after 1574. The keel
length was probably 20-30m and the possible overall length
around 35m. The vessel was probably three-masted, though
no elements of rigging were found. The lowest deck served as
a gundeck; two gun ports have been recorded in the recovered
structure above the main wale, and a total of six to eight gun
ports per side can be assumed. One of the cannon recovered
during mitigation was marked with the initials “TG” and a
grasshopper emblem, linking it to the inluential Elizabethan
inancier, merchant and gunfounder, Thomas Gresham.
The Gresham cannon, and the other cast-iron guns, are rare
examples of early English cast-iron gun founding. Although
the evidence is mixed, the ship was possibly outbound from
London or another harbour on the Thames or Medway. The
cause of the shipwreck is unknown, but stranding on an
adjacent sandbank could have led to the loss; there were no
indications of general unseaworthiness or previous damage on
the recorded hull elements. It seems likely that the wreck may
have been subject to salvage in the 19th century, as there is a
report dating to 1846 that refers to the recovery by divers from
Whitstable (the same harbour used for the mitigation work) of
iron guns, curious ingots and iron from an ancient wreck in
the vicinity of Princes Channel.
As well as being signiicant for its analytical potential, the
Princes Channel wreck was very important as a irst example
of marine development-led archaeology in the UK. This is
the irst time that a wreck has been discovered, investigated
and recovered directly as a result of dredging. It was also the
PLA’s irst major encounter with archaeological procedures,
and the irst experience of WA and of English Heritage with
dealing with this particular set of circumstances. The outer
Thames Estuary is a very demanding environment, distant
from harbours, subject to strong tides and poor visibility,
exposed to the weather, and frequented by large ships at very
close quarters. Many lessons have been learned, and some
issues remain unresolved.
Key lessons include the successful development of a
close working relationship between the port authority
and archaeologists, especially in using the considerable
experience and facilities of the port authority to support
archaeological investigations. The adoption of a “staged
approach” to investigation ensured that resources were
carefully targeted to enable successive decisions to be taken,
and that the eventual mitigation strategy was well-founded.
The integration of marine geophysics, diver-based methods,
and digital surveying onshore achieved a good overall record
of the site on the seabed and of the recovered timbers and
artefacts, even though on-site visibility varied from zero to
20-30cm. Despite clearance and dispersal operations before
the possible importance of the wreck was recognised, and
despite possible 19th century salvage operations and probable
impacts from historic ishing activity, the Princes Channel
wreck retained considerable archaeological integrity and
was certainly worth thorough investigation. Some problems
are more intractable, especially the logistical dificulties
of operating eficiently in the outer Thames. Also, existing
problems relating to the handling, ownership, analysis,
publication and long-term curation of shipwreck material in
the UK were brought into sharp focus.
It would be fair to say that the learning curve for all parties
was very steep, and the PLA committed considerable
resources to the investigations. The result, so far, has been
very rewarding, presenting an evocative and informative
window into the Elizabethan past of today’s port.
Further Reading
http://www.wessexarch.co.uk/projects/marine/thameswreck/index.html
The Playa Damas Shipwreck and Prehistory
The Playa Damas Shipwreck
An Early Sixteenth-Century Shipwreck in Panama
Filipe Castro and Carlos Fitzgerald
Nautical Archaeology Program
Texas A&M University
USA
Iberian Ships
Located near the lovely little village of Nombre de Dios, on
Panama’s Caribbean coast, the Playa Damas shipwreck is yet
another Spanish shipwreck threatened by treasure hunters.
Sunk in very shallow water sometime during the irst decades
of the 16th century, it was probably initially salvaged soon
after its loss, and the only artifacts left were the heavy iron
guns and anchors that were probably stored in the holds and
were quickly buried in the sand.
There are only approximately eighty known shipwrecks
worldwide dating to the period of Iberia’s maritime expansion
in the early 16th-century. Only a handful of these shipwrecks
has been excavated by archaeologists, however, and several
of the shipwrecks apparently have been destroyed by treasure
hunters in search of valuable artifacts to be sold at auction,
or looted by sport divers before any archaeological study or
evaluation.
The result is that nautical archaeologists know very little
about 16th century Spanish ship building. There is almost no
research or scientiic study which provides information on
the complex technology used to build the ships of Columbus,
Vasco da Gama and Magellan. Where was the living space?
How was the cargo hold designed? What was the versatility
of the riggings and the strength and speed of the hull?
As we are writing these lines, the Playa Damas shipwreck
risks being another sad story, another lost opportunity to look
into the design and construction of these amazing machines,
the space shuttles of their time as Karl Vandenhole, a producer
from Spiegel-TV, has called them. A proposed collaboration
between a for-proit salvage company, the Government of
Panama and the Institute of Nautical Archaeology (INA)
is now possibly on the rocks and the investigation of the
shipwreck and its artifacts the subject of court proceedings.
The shipwreck, discovered at Playa Damas near Nombre
de Dios on the Caribbean coast of Panama in 1997 by
amateur historian and diver Warren White, an American
expatriate living in Panama, has involved the interests of
several groups with overlapping interests. One of the irst
was IMDI, a salvage company formed by White with Nilda
Vasquez of Panama and a group of investors and technical
specialists, which removed the irst artifacts from the site in
2001. Recovery of artifacts from the wreck by IMDI in 2001
was documented by a video now shown on the Archaeology
Channel website. Subsequently, White became estranged
from IMDI and has publicly charged that the shipwreck is
threatened by IMDI plans to remove more artifacts from
the ship. White stated that his biggest concerns for the site
are “bureaucratic and governmental mis-management.” In
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
interviews with Archaeological Legacy Institute Executive
Director Richard Pettigrew in November 2003, Vasquez
insisted that IMDI has a legal Panamanian government
permit to conduct archaeological exploration of the wreck,
but Carlos Fitzgerald, National Director of Cultural Heritage
of the Panamanian National Institute of Culture (INAC),
responded that IMDI’s permit covered production of a video
documentary but not archaeological excavation.
The Project
In July 2003 the Institute of Nautical Archaeology at Texas
A&M University (INA) was invited by the media group
Spiegel to consider the complete excavation of a shipwreck
at Playa Damas, located near Nombre de Dios, on the
Atlantic coast of Panama. The media had announced, based
on some evidence not conirmed by archaeological analysis,
that this shipwreck was thought to be Columbus’ Vizcaína,
a small 50 ton caravel lost near Portobelo, during his fourth
voyage, in 1503. Almost every year somebody inds a piece
of wood in the Caribbean and claims that it belonged to one
of Columbus’ ships; however, regardless of whether or not
a ship of Columbus, the shipwreck was of interest, because
ships dating from the 15th and 16th centuries are suficiently
rare to be of scientiic interest and this one appeared from the
evidence to be an early 16th-century Spanish nao or caravel.
The Spiegel group made an agreement with the government
of Panama, through INAC, to fully fund the excavation and
conservation of the Playa Damas shipwreck. The money was
to be donated by several European sponsors who asked for
nothing in return.
In July 2003 we went to Hamburg, Germany, to meet with the
Spiegel team and discuss the feasibility of this project. Tests
carried out by the Spiegel-TV team on materials from the
shipwreck, removed with permission from the heritage ofice
and in cooperation with the German government, had already
yielded some incredible dates. A sample of the hull’s timber
– from an oak hull plank – was dated to the late 15th century.
We were very enthusiastic about the project. One of its most
appealing features was the fact that Panama had just changed
its law concerning the protection of its underwater cultural
heritage, being the irst country in the world to ratify the
UNESCO Convention of the Underwater Cultural Heritage.
The Convention had recently been voted by over one hundred
countries and its adoption greatly strengthening the state’s
role in protecting and researching Panama’s underwater
cultural heritage. This made it a perfect opportunity to show
the world that developing countries can be on the front line in
ields like nautical archaeology.
The Spiegel group agreed to try to raise a sum of around
US$1,200,000 to pay for the excavation, conservation,
publication, and possibly exhibition of the artifacts of this
shipwreck. The details of the exhibition of the artifacts
would have to be planned at a later date, depending upon the
The Playa Damas Shipwreck and Prehistory
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
amount of money raised by the Spiegel group, INA and Texas
A&M University.
The Playa Damas Shipwreck Project
It seems that this shipwreck site was known for some time
by the local ishermen, who dived regularly on it to catch
lobsters. As noted above, it was found by an American diver,
Mr. Warren White, in 1997. In the fall of 2001 Mr. Warren
White visited this site with a treasure hunting company
– Investigaciones Maritimas del Istmo, SA. (IMDI), which
used a “mailbox” to dig a trench, said to have been four meters
deep, around the vessel. A large collection of artifacts was
raised. Most were stored at a facility built at Portobelo by the
treasure hunters, sometimes mixed with other artifacts from
different provenances. A few artifacts may have been lost
forever: a lead seal, numerous stone cannonballs, and two
iron guns dropped in the bay of Nombre de Dios after being
found too heavy to be raised into a truck on a nearby pier.
On September 2003 a team from Texas A&M’s INA visited
the site and started the preparation of the logistics of the
excavation of the Playa Damas shipwreck. The shipwreck
lay at a depth of about 4.5 m (15 ft.) and the site consisted
of a ballast pile with an area of about 60 m2, roughly 10 x 6
meters, with three large anchors and an important number
of iron guns, at least twelve. A portion of the hull was
untouched, protected under the ballast pile. The planking was
6 cm thick, frames were 17 to 18 cm square in section, and
stringers were 27 x 7 cm. All these scantlings, the number of
guns, and the size of the anchors indicated a ship larger than
the 50 ton Vizcaína.
A new sample of timber – this time from an oak futtock –
was taken and dated. This sample produced a radiocarbon
date of 1530-1550, compatible with the previous one, since
hull planks were traditionally cut from much larger trees
than futtocks, and the sample from the planking may have
corresponded to an inner portion of the tree. Reutilization
of timber cannot be excluded as another explanation for the
early dating of these samples. Carbon dates from the lining
of a shard of an olive jar also yielded compatible dates: 14501530.
In order to get the project moving it was thought best to
start the treatment of the artifact collection in the USA, at
Texas A&M University’s Conservation Research Laboratory
(CRL), the Nautical Archaeology Program main conservation
laboratory. There were enormous dificulties posed by the
treatment of the large concretions containing a formidable
gun collection, and these could be processed more effectively
in Texas.
In September 2003, the week after returning from Panama,
INA sent a copy of the protocol signed with the Jamaican
government, as a possible model of cooperation, to INAC,
for analysis. INA’s protocol with the Jamaican government
had governed ten years of archaeological work in Port Royal,
Jamaica. Under the terms of that agreement INA agreed to fully
excavate the shipwreck, conserve and study the artifacts, and
publish the shipwreck both in scholarly journals and popular
magazines. The artifacts and records remained the property
of the Jamaican government. During the following months
INA received an authorization to transport the artifacts raised
by the salvage company IMDI to Texas A&M University, and
an invitation to submit a proposal to excavate the shipwreck,
which should be the irst step to obtain the protocol between
INA and INAC.
We had in mind establishing a network of interests in place,
contacting the diving centers to bring their clients and see our
work, the Nautical Archaeology Society to organize weekend
courses on the site, the local tourism organization to prepare
a series of panels with pictures of the ongoing projects, and
even the treasure hunting company, to discuss the possibility
of making replicas of the artifacts for sale, and recover
some of the money that they had allegedly invested in the
project when they were convinced that they would become
millionaires selling the artifacts from Columbus’ Vizcaína.
Problems
Then the problems began. There apparently was a dispute
about permits. Fitzgerald reported in November 2003 that
IMDI has no legal right to explore the wreck or remove
additional artifacts, claiming his understanding that IMDI
never received a written permit to excavate or salvage the
site, but instead was granted verbal permission to salvage
individual artifacts that were thought to be threatened by
theft and a permit to ilm. An apparent misunderstanding
regarding the granted permission threatened a confrontation
between IMDI and INAC.
Dr. Filipe Castro, INA project manager for the Playa
Damas site, nevertheless submitted a formal proposal for
collaboration to Ernesto Cordovez, head of IMDI and Nilda
Vasquez’s son. The proposed plan called for a cooperative
research program by which INA and IMDI both would have
a role in the project. According to Vasquez, the last sticking
point before agreement can be reached is IMDI’s insistence
that artifacts not be allowed to leave Panama.
In November and December of 2003 INA learned that the
IMDI had decided to salvage the Playa Damas shipwreck.
After contacting several shareholders of IMDI, as well as
its CEO, Cap. Ernesto Cordovez, INA believed it had an
oral agreement of the larger shareholder of the company,
Mr. Gassan Salama, who had been appointed governor of
the Province of Colon in November of that year. On the
telephone he agreed to turn over the artifacts salvaged in
2001 and promised to help INA overcome some bureaucratic
problems that might arise regarding the temporary export of
the artifacts to Texas, USA. It was agreed that the second
half of January 2004 would be a good time to arrange for
shipping the recovered material to CRL.
On December 2003, however, IMDI was reportedly visited
by executives of a Florida company named Motivation Inc.,
based in Key West and connected to the Mel Fisher family.
After this visit the larger shareholders of IMDI seem to have
changed their minds and decided that they wanted to keep the
right to sell the artifacts of the Playa Damas shipwreck and
start the exploration of a number of shipwrecks for which they
had secured salvage permits from the Ministry of Economy
0 The Playa Damas Shipwreck and Prehistory
before the publication of the underwater cultural heritage
law, which was approved on May 28, 2003 and published in
the Gaceta Oicial of Panama on April 2, 2003.
The Playa Damas shipwreck already had been declared a
National Heritage site by the Panamanian government before
Panama signed a UNESCO convention protecting historic
shipwrecks. Panama passed legislation in August 2003,
based on the UNESCO convention, declaring shipwrecks
National Heritage sites.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Political Implications
That year IMDI hired a Cuban archaeologist, Mr. Abraham
Lopez, formerly employed by Motivation Inc., and started
the salvage works on the site early in 2005.
It is not known how disturbed the shipwreck site has been, nor
what kind of recording was done by IMDI’s team. No report
has been released and INA was asked not to make a planned
inspection dive early in 2005, after the salvage works were
stopped by a court injunction.
There were legal problems related to these permits. The most
important one was that they were published in the Gaceta
Oicial on December 30, 2003, after the publication of Law
32, published on April 2 of 2003, and Law 58, published
on August 12 of 2003, which forbid salvage and establish
INAC as the sole authority competent to grant excavations.
The second was that even considering that the permits were
issued before the publication of law 32 and 58, although
not published until December 2003, salvage works should
have started within six months, and the license had therefore
expired in September 2003. The third problem was that it
was not clear whether the Playa Damas shipwreck actually
was inside the areas published with the permits.
In the meantime the New World Legacy, a ship belonging to
a treasure hunting company named Admiralty Corporation,
was impounded in Panama and found to carry archaeological
artifacts, allegedly recovered from a shipwreck in Honduras.
The New World Legacy had been impounded before in
Panama, in 2000, then carrying a number of archaeological
artifacts said to have been recovered from several areas
around Portobelo.
INA went to Panama in January of 2004 and met with IMDI
CEO Cap. Ernesto Cordovez, his mother, Mrs. Nilda Vasquez,
a former collaborator of INAC and sometimes said to be the
architect of IMDI, and the major shareholders of the company,
Mr. Gassan Salama and his lawyer, Mr. Sarturio Segarra.
INA was told that IMDI would like very much to work in a
joint venture, but opposed the export of the artifacts to Texas
A&M University for conservation treatment. Furthermore,
they would not yield the right to sell the artifacts of this or
any other shipwreck they had planned to salvage. IMDI also
announced its intention to hire Motivation Inc. to build and
staff a laboratory and pay the investment, at least partially,
with the sale of the treasure they planned on inding.
Texas A&M University’s INA is still trying to get a permit to
excavate and study whatever is left of this shipwreck.
The example of the relations between INA and the Turkish
government was explained in detail: after thirty years of
continuous INA work in Turkey, the Bodrum Museum is one
of the most visited museums in the whole Mediterranean
basin. INA excavated shipwrecks had appeared in National
Geographic Magazine thirteen times, the INA center in
Bodrum received students and scholars from all over the world
every year and housed an outstanding library, a laboratory,
and a dormitory for students and scholars. A series of TV
documentaries has been produced on INA projects in Turkey
and elsewhere.
Acknowledgements
INA also tried to explain that it was not likely that there
were any valuable artifacts in such close proximity to the
coast – since the Spanish empire possessed an extremely
competent salvage industry – and that it was a tragic mistake
to destroy Panama’s cultural heritage, sell the valuable
artifacts at auction, and let the wreck be poorly researched
and published. The media reported that the wreck contained
emeralds and gold.
The Panamanian government has shown signs of support
for the archaeological community and the promotion of long
term archaeology projects instead of short term treasure
hunting ventures.
As INA’s founder, George Bass, says, Sweden’s main tourist
attraction is the Vasa Museum, which brings many millions
of dollars in net revenues every year, employs lots of people
and gives Sweden an amazing international visibility. The
Bodrum Museum of Underwater Archaeology, created by
the INA, is now the most visited archaeological museum
in Turkey, takes in about $2.5 million a year in ticket sales
alone, to which one must add souvenirs, extra meals eaten
in restaurants, taxis, hotels, plane fares, etc. Only the future
will say whether the contending parties and the overlapping
interests can reach an agreement so that Playa Damas will
have a similar happy end.
The authors wish to thank a long list of supporters of this
project. The Spiegel media group, Dr. Peter Amaral, Mr. Nils
Peter Sieger, Her Excellency Dra. Minerva Lara Baptista,
Ambassador of Panama in Portugal, Her Excellency Dra.
Elida Pita, Consul of Panama in Portugal, and the Association
of Former Texas A&M University Students with special
thanks to Ing. Lincoln Garcia.
Information Sources
Brinkbaumer, Klaus, and Clemens Hoeges, “Die letze Reise des
Columbus (I)”, in Der Spiegel, No. 25, 14.Jun.2004.
Brinkbaumer, Klaus, and Clemens Hoeges, “Die letze Reise des
Columbus (II)”, in Der Spiegel, No. 26, 21.Jun.2004.
Brinkbaumer, Klaus, and Clemens Hoeges, Die letzte Reise, Der
Fall Christoph Columbus, München: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt,
2004.
The Sad Case of the ss Maori 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Sad Case of the ss Maori
John Gribble
Wessex Archaeology, United Kingdom
(Formerly Maritime Archaeologist,
South African Heritage Resources Agency)
The impact of human agents on underwater cultural heritage
is but one of a host of problems that beset the management of
this fragile resource. In particular, the degradation of wrecks
popular as good dive sites is an area of great concern to the
South African Heritage Resources Agency (SAHRA), and
is perhaps epitomised in South Africa by the case of the ss
Maori.
The Maori was owned by the Shaw, Saville and Albion
Company and was a typical cargo vessel of the early 1890’s.
She was a steel screw steamer with a registered tonnage of
5,317 tons and was built during the latter part of 1893 by
the irm C.S. Swan and Hunter at Wallsend-on-Tyne near
Newcastle in the United Kingdom. She was a little over 402
feet long, 48 feet wide, and 29 feet deep, with two decks.
Her triple expansion engine was built at the Central Marine
Engineering Works in West Hartlepool and had a nominal
461 horsepower.
The vessel was originally square-rigged on her foremast
– carrying working masts and rigging on a steamship was
still found to be useful by some steamship owners in case
of a breakdown of the engines — and as a result she had
taller masts than were the norm on many other steamers of
the period.
The Loss of the Maori
At about one o’clock on the morning of Thursday 5 August
1909 the Maori went ashore in dense fog and sank near
Figure 1 : A historical photo
of the wreck of the Maori
taken before the crew left
aboard had been rescued.
Note the figure on the
foremast (Courtesy John
Marsh Maritime Collection,
IZIKO Maritime Museum)
Duiker Point on the Cape Peninsula, about 20km south of
central Cape Town.
She had left Table Bay shortly before midnight after
recoaling, and sailed into drizzle and thickening fog as she
headed south towards Cape Point. Forty minutes later, with
her engines going at full speed, the Maori struck a rock,
which according to those aboard, seemed to stand well out
of the water. Shrouded in dense fog the vessel had come
very close inshore and had unknowingly entered the bay
north of Duiker Point. The irst intimation of danger was the
lookout’s warning cry, but by then the vessel was only about
thirty yards from the rock, and although her master, Captain
G Nichole, immediately ordered the wheel hard-a-port, the
Maori ran up on to the rock (Fig 1).
Badly holed, the vessel started sinking by the bow, and the
crew were ordered into the boats. It was assumed that the
entire complement had boarded the three lifeboats, but it later
became apparent that ifteen crewmen had been left behind.
The lifeboat commanded by the Chief Oficer and carrying
fourteen others was the irst to land at eight that morning and
raise the alarm.
Ultimately 32 of the crew of 53 were lost, including Captain
Nichole and all the navigating oficers. The vessel was a
complete loss.
The Maori Today
Today the Maori is one of the most popular recreational dive
sites on the Cape Peninsula. Its location on the western,
Atlantic seaboard of the Cape Peninsula means that during
the South African summer months diving conditions on the
site are often optimal, with very cold, but very clean water.
The sheltered nature of the bay in which the wreck lies means
The Sad Case of the ss Maori
that it retains a remarkable degree of structural integrity,
with large portions of the vessel surviving relatively intact.
When Jaques Cousteau dived on the wreck of the Maori in
the 1960s he declared that it was the best preserved wreck of
its type that he had seen. An added attraction and one of the
reasons for its currently degraded state is the fact that much
of the Maori’s cargo remained substantially intact, packed in
her holds until relatively recently.
On a violent coast, where most wrecks break up rapidly, the
Maori is thus something of a rarity, both as an archaeological
and diving site, and it is hardly surprising that with the
growth in sport-diving during the last 40 years, the Maori has
become a site favoured by divers.
Sadly, this popularity has not been without price. Although
never salvaged on a commercial basis after her loss, the
Maori has been the victim of years of souvenir hunting by
thousands of divers, and is now a shadow of her former self.
At one stage during the 1970s divers used dynamite on the
wreck to blast their way into the hull in search of non-ferrous
metal. Today her holds are virtually empty and her structure
has been further damaged by scores of irresponsibly placed
anchors.
This problem is not limited to the Maori and manifests itself
on many other shipwreck sites along the South African coast.
Although underwater heritage has enjoyed blanket legislative
protection since 1986 (under the terms of the National
Heritage Resources Act any wreck older than 60 years of age
is protected) a long tradition of salvage dating back to the early
18th century left a widely held perception that the contents of
shipwrecks are there for the taking. However, two decades
of legislative protection and a huge amount of work done by
the South African Heritage Resources Agency, the IZIKO
Maritime Museum and others to publicise the protected status
of shipwrecks has slowly borne fruit. There is now a general
awareness and grudging acceptance, particularly within the
diving community, of the protected status of shipwrecks.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
But legislation cannot stand alone. Of equal importance to the
protection of underwater cultural heritage is an understanding
by those using the resource and the wider South African
public of what underwater cultural heritage is, and why it is
worth preserving. Without winning over hearts and minds
legislation can never truly succeed.
For a few years SAHRA, in conjunction with the IZIKO
Maritime Museum, has been developing a pilot Cape
Peninsula Shipwreck Route. The route aims to introduce
Capetonians and visitors to the city to the hundreds of wrecks
that lie in the waters of the Peninsula and thereby increase
general public awareness of the importance and fragility of
our underwater heritage, while at the same time formalising
access to a number of popular, threatened wreck sites.
Land-based information boards are planned for a number of
sites on the route around the Cape Peninsula, and the irst of
these has been installed adjacent to the slipway at the popular
harbour of Hout Bay, from which divers access the Maori
(Fig 2). An accompanying pamphlet has been produced. In
addition, underwater information plinths will be installed at
the sites often visited by divers, such as the Maori. These
plinths will not only provide information about the history of
the particular wreck and layout of the site, but will also carry
a strong conservation message, stressing the legal protection
that such sites enjoy, and the responsibilities of divers when
visiting them.
While this approach to managing threatened underwater
sites is in some senses post hoc, if it proves successful in
managing risk on a heavily utilised site such as the Maori,
SAHRA envisages its useful extension to other threatened, or
potentially threatened sites, in the future. It is hoped that an
increased awareness amongst visitors of the archaeological
potential of a well preserved wreck like the Maori, will
ensure the long term survival of the site.
Figure 2: Cape Peninsula Wreck Route sign
for the Maori
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Sad Case of the ss Maori
Atherley Narrows
Atherley Narrows Fish Weirs
R. James Ringer
Underwater Archaeologist
Parks Canada Agency
Canada
During the fall of 1615, the French explorer Samuel de
Champlain, in the company of a Huron raiding party, passed
near the small narrows separating Lake Couchiching and
Lake Simcoe in southern Ontario, Canada. In his journal he
noted that the Huron, using a number of weirs, caught large
quantities of ish that they preserved for winter. Consisting
of closely spaced stakes driven into the bottom, perhaps with
interlaced material, and extending almost completely across
the narrows, the weir directed ish to small openings where
they were captured with nets. Champlain’s account remains
one of the very few early references to native ish weir
technology in this part of North America but only depicts the
inal years of a very ancient site. Some 5,000 years ago, when
construction on the Great Pyramid at Giza was commencing,
the irst ish weirs were being installed at Atherley Narrows.
Following the dispersal of the Huron in the 1650s, the weir
ishery at the narrows appears to have been discontinued.
The Ojibway peoples who moved into the abandoned area,
although aware of the existence and function of the weirs,
never took up their use. Following Champlain’s brief
account, the ish weirs at Atherley Narrows fade into relative
obscurity and serious study of the site has been a relatively
recent development.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
impacts, Parks Canada embarked on an education program
and instituted no-anchoring and no-wake zones at the site.
During the 1990s, Parks Canada became aware of a plan to
build a second bridge parallel to the existing highway bridge
over the narrows. Plans called for the new bridge to pass
directly over a signiicant stake structure on one side of the
narrows and concern for the protection of this feature during
construction was expressed. The survey revealed that this
stake feature was actively deteriorating. Water currents were
slowly exposing and loosening the stakes and the sandblasting
effect of water-borne particles was highly degrading the
exposed portions of the stakes. By far the most serious threat,
however, came from ishing activity. Rather than allow this
feature to degrade further, Parks Canada recommended
excavation and removal of the stakes to recover as much
information as possible. This brought the local aboriginal
band into the consultation phase.
The local Chippewas, although never users of the ish weirs,
nevertheless deeply value their traditional role as stewards
of the weirs. To them, Atherley Narrows was much more
than a ishing place. It was a traditional meeting place for
Aboriginal nations: a place for treaties, trade, festivities and
spiritual ceremonies. Due to this, the Chippewas felt they had
a considerable role to play in any decision making process
concerning the weir site, a hidden but important component
of their cultural landscape.
Work in the 1960s and 1970s by the Royal Ontario Museum
and, more importantly, by Trent University, brought to
light the richness of the resource as well as its antiquity.
This research led to the narrows being declared a National
Historic Site in 1982. Atherley Narrows, located near the
present town of Orillia, Ontario, is part of the historic TrentSevern Waterway and is administered by the Parks Canada
Agency. In 1988, as part of a Parks Canada exercise, the site
was identiied as a threatened resource and Parks Canada’s
Underwater Archaeology Services were called in to undertake
an assessment of the site. Threat to the site came in the form
of increased recreational boating trafic, new condominium
and marina development as well as sport ishing activity.
Consultations, involving interested parties, eventually
evolved into a more formal collaborative organization, Fish
Fence Circle. This group, composed of representatives of
the Chippewas, local municipal governments and historical
associations, residents of the area and Parks Canada, and
through open and respectful discussions, approved and
oversaw the excavation of the stake feature beneath the
bridge. The removed stakes were conserved and radiocarbon
dating of a few of these revealed that they were some of the
more recent from the site. The work of the Fish Fence Circle
continues today both on the educational front and arriving
at recommendations balancing the use of the area with
preservation of the national historic site.
The results of a number of years of survey were less than
encouraging. All of the areas where weir stake alignments
had originally been located had undergone signiicant
change. Where hundreds of closely spaced stakes in aligned
patterns were expected, only a very few, generally widely
spaced stakes were seen protruding above the bottom. To
the archaeologists, it was obvious that the stakes were being
extracted or sheared off in some manner. Judging by the
amount of ishing line wrapped around many of the remaining
stakes and ishing lures actually embedded in the stakes, sport
ishing activity appeared to be the main culprit. Contributory
causes seemed to be boat anchoring, marina dredging and
propeller wash from high speed boating. To mitigate these
Parks Canada’s focus at Atherley Narrows is now on
periodic monitoring of the cultural resources with a view
towards understanding and mitigating the adverse impacts.
The monitoring plan looks at both the natural and cultural
aspects of the threats. On the natural side, conservation
assessments establish the actual physical condition of the
stakes, current meters track the magnitude of the current low
over the site and other measuring devices monitor the rates
of sedimentation relating to the burial of stakes. Cultural
impacts are monitored by the precise plotting and tagging of
numerous stakes providing a means of quantifying resource
destruction. The goal is to ensure the viability of this rare,
important, enduring and intriguing Aboriginal ishing site.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 1: A diver observing an
alignment of stakes at the Atherley
Narrows Fish Weir site; note the fishing
lures entangled in the stakes
(Peter Waddell/Parks Canada Agency)
Figure 2: Archaeologist mapping stakes
at Atherley Narrows
(Nick Van Vliet/Parks Canada Agency)
Figure 3: A diver photographing possible
weir stakes
(Peter Waddell/Parks Canada Agency)
Atherley Narrows
The Four Commandments
The Four Commandments:
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Response of Hong Kong SAR to the Impact of Seabed Development on Underwater Cultural Heritage
Cosmos Coroneos
Director
Cosmos Archaeology Pty Ltd
Australia
Historically, the impact of seabed development has often
been relegated to a position of low priority on the list of
threats to underwater cultural heritage. This is largely due to
the fact that the more highly preserved underwater sites are
generally situated in remote or deep locations where seabed
development was less intense. However, threats to underwater
cultural heritage via seabed development are increasing due
to the rapid increase of urbanisation and expansion of coastal
development into such remote areas. The situation is further
exacerbated by the irony that the bulk of underwater cultural
heritage sites generally occurs in close proximity to coastal
urban population centres – centres which have usually been
established for centuries, if not millennia, and hence have
accumulated a plethora of archaeological sites, varying from
maritime related infrastructure to shipwrecks.
Governments, or the agencies that are tasked with the
protection of underwater cultural heritage, deal with the
impact of seabed development in differing manners ranging
from reactive to proactive. The reactive approach involves
the development of protection strategies in response to the
identiication of archaeological sites as they get reported,
either directly or indirectly, to the authorities.
The
effectiveness of this stratagem varies according to the quality
of communication networks within local communities and
development organisations. This strategy thus has signiicant
laws, as it relies on incidental observation and goodwill on
the part of the sea bed developer. Unexpected archaeological
discoveries during construction programmes generally cost
Figure 1: Past and proposed reclamations in Hong Kong SAR
(Figure 13.2 in J.A. Fyfe, B. Shaw, et al, May 2000, The Quaternary
Geology of Hong Kong. Hong Kong Geological Survey)
money in terms of time lost. Unless there is some inancial
advantage in publicising a site – or the authorities have
been unoficially alerted – such sites are usually severely
compromised or destroyed by the construction works.
The presence of legislation protecting such sites does not
always help, as the developer can claim that the signiicance
or antiquity of the site was not apparent as it was being
destroyed. This is especially the case when dealing with
seabed development where the impacts can be relatively
“invisible.”
Proactive management of underwater cultural heritage
in response to seabed development involves engagement
at the initial planning stages. This approach enables the
construction programme to be planned with full knowledge of
the constraints posed by underwater cultural heritage, thereby
mitigating losses which may be incurred by the developers
through unexpected setbacks and delays. The integration of
archaeology and heritage issues at the “ground level” in the
development process is consequently more likely to ensure a
better outcome with regards to the preservation of underwater
cultural heritage.
An excellent example of proactive management of underwater
cultural heritage with relation to seabed development is that
practised in Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
(SAR). It is a model that could well be adapted by other
countries. The programme, established three years before
the adoption of the UNESCO Convention for the Protection
of the Underwater Cultural Heritage, compares well with the
Articles and Rules of the Convention.
The Hong Kong we see today, with its skyscrapers and
state-of-the-art transport infrastructures, belies the antiquity
of the place. Hong Kong’s heritage reaches back to 8,000
years ago where Late Neolithic sites have been found on
many islands and undeveloped shorelines of the Hong Kong
SAR archipelago. These sites are coastal and post date the
cessation of the last great sea level rise at 6,000 years ago. It
is expected that evidence of earlier human occupation of the
Hong Kong region may be found buried under the current
seabed.
Hong Kong SAR lanks the western entrance to the Pearl
River delta, upon which is sited Guangzhou, one of the
world’s busiest trading ports for the last 4,000 years. Hong
Kong itself straddled the maritime trunk route between
southern and northern China. The amount of trade that
passed through the Hong Kong archipelago also attracted
more than its fair share of piracy and naval warfare. Prior to
the establishment of Victoria on Hong Kong Island, the main
population centres within Hong Kong SAR were Tuen Mun
and Kowloon. Kowloon, and possibly Tung Chung on the
island of Lantau, were for a short time Imperial cities hosting
the court of the last Song Emperors in the 13th-century.
The heritage of Hong Kong SAR is essentially maritime
in character, whether it be through trade, industry, ishing,
The Four Commandments
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
piracy, or warfare, and numerous expressions of this rich and
ancient cultural diversity can be found on the seabed of the
region.
The threats to underwater cultural heritage from seabed
development are acute in Hong Kong, possibly more so than
most other coastal centres in the world. Hong Kong SAR
is situated on a relatively small, mountainous peninsula and
equally small, mountainous islands. Population pressures
are such that the expansion of the urban sprawl is directed
out to sea. Reclamation for housing, commerce and
transport infrastructure is a common feature in Hong Kong
development.
Underpinning the protection of the underwater cultural
heritage of Hong Kong SAR is the Antiquities and Monuments
Ordinance (Chapter 53 of the Laws of Hong Kong).
The Antiquities and Monuments Ordinance contains
provisions for the protection of cultural heritage which are
not dissimilar to other like laws from around the world. For
example, cultural objects that pre-date 1800 AD, whether in,
on or under land or sea, cannot be removed without a license
(Sections 2 and 12).
However, as stated previously, the presence of such laws is
not enough to eficiently protect underwater cultural heritage.
On their own, these laws are often applied after the act, the
act being the discovery of a site during construction. In
such circumstances the site may have been already been
irretrievably destroyed or severely compromised.
The use of heritage speciic laws for the proactive, and therefore
more effective, management of underwater cultural heritage
requires that they be linked to planning instruments which
regulate and monitor the effects of proposed developments.
In Hong Kong SAR the relevant planning instrument is the
Environmental Impact Assessment Ordinance (Chapter
499).
This Ordinance requires the impacts of a designated project,
such as dredging operations, reclamations, etc., on sites
Figure 2: Kowloon Rock (N. Richards)
of cultural heritage importance be mitigated as part of the
project approval process (Schedule 4, Part 6:f). Sites of
cultural heritage are deined in the Ordinance as being in
accordance with the deinitions of ‘antiquities’ and ‘relics’ in
the Antiquities and Monuments Ordinance.
Annexes 10 and 19 of the Environmental Impact Assessment
Technical Memorandum associated with the Environmental
Impact Assessment Ordinance give guidelines for assessing
impact and signiicance. The Technical Memorandum
identiies a general presumption in favour of the protection
and conservation of all sites of cultural heritage and requires
impacts on such sites to be kept at a minimum. There is no
quantitative standard for assessing the signiicance of cultural
heritage sites, but it is generally accepted that sites of unique
archaeological and historical value should be considered
highly signiicant.
Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) Study Briefs
issued by the Environmental Protection Department almost
always include the requirement to engage “a qualiied marine
archaeologist” to “..identify whether there is any possible
existence of sites or objects of cultural heritage, for example
shipwreck, within any seabed areas that would be affected
by the marine works of the Project.” The archaeologist is
required to adhere to the Guidelines for Marine Archaeological
Investigation (MAI) as issued by the Antiquities and
Monuments Ofice. These Guidelines are often appended to
the Study Brief.
The MAI guidelines were developed by a British maritime
archaeologist Sara Ali (née Draper) who resided in Hong
Kong during the 1990s. The Guidelines clearly articulate four
tasks — colloquially referred to as the Four Commandments
— that have to be followed for the successful undertaking of
the MAI. These tasks are as follows:
Task 1
Baseline Review
Task 2 Geophysical Survey
Task 3 Establishing Archaeological Potential
The Four Commandments
Task 4 Remote Operated Vehicle (ROV)/Visual Diver
Survey/Watching Brief
The Baseline Review is in essence a desktop study which
examines existing archaeological, historical, geotechnical
and hydrographical data associated with the study area. The
aim of the exercise is to predict the extent, variety, condition
and signiicance of the underwater cultural heritage within
the development envelope.
The Geophysical Survey involves remote sensing techniques
such as seismic proiling, side scan sonar and echo sounding.
Marine geophysics contractors almost always carry out such
surveys during the EIA process for development, principally
for project engineers. When the opportunity arises the
indings of the Baseline Review (Task 1) are communicated
to the marine geophysicists so that they can calibrate their
equipment accordingly for the best results. Desired output
formats, presentation and basic data interpretation are also
requested for Task 3 of the Guidelines.
The Establishing of Archaeological Potential combines the
results of Tasks 1 and 2 and identiies, or isolates, areas or
anomalies of archaeological potential. The indings of the
studies form the basis for the formulation of a strategy for
further investigation – Task 4. If no anomalies or areas of
archaeological potential are identiied then Task 4 is not
required.
Task 4, Remote Operated Vehicle (ROV)/Visual Diver Survey/
Watching Brief, allows for a combination of investigation
techniques to be employed. The choice of techniques is
dependant on the nature of the anomaly or area, whether it is
buried or on the seabed surface, and environmental conditions
such as high concentration of contaminates, water depth,
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
strong currents or heavy marine trafic. Task 4 also requires
that the AMO be contacted immediately if archaeological
material is found to seek guidance on its signiicance and the
preparation of appropriate mitigation measures.
The Guidelines for Marine Archaeological Investigation
issued by the Antiquities and Monuments Ofice are founded
on solid archaeological principles which conform to the
UNESCO Convention for the Protection of Underwater
Cultural Heritage.
One of the main strengths of the MAI Guidelines is that
they provide developers, project managers and non-heritage
related government departments with a clear understanding of
the steps involved in the management of underwater cultural
heritage at the project development and approval stage. Such
proactive engagement is one cornerstone in the effective and
successful management of underwater cultural heritage with
relation to seabed development.
Information Sources
Antiquities and Monuments Ofice website http://www.amo.gov.
hk/en/about.php
For details of the Antiquities and Monuments Ordinance (Chapter
53) and the Environmental Impact Assessment Ordinance (Chapter
499):
http://www.legislation.gov.hk/eng/home.htm
For information on the Hong Kong Environmental Protection
Department, the interpretations and implementation of the
Environmental Impact Assessment Ordinance and the Environmental
Impact Assessment Technical Memorandum:
http://www.epd.gov.hk/eia/
Figure 3: Typical view of Hong
Kong waterfront (C. Coroneos)
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Port Royal, Jamaica:
Archaeological Past and Development Potential
Donny L. Hamilton
Professor, Institute of Nautical Archaeology
Texas A&M University
USA
Few people seeing modern day Port Royal, Jamaica, a small
isolated ishing village situated at the tip of a 29 kilometer
(18 mile) long sand spit called the Palisadoes, would ever
think that it once played a major role in the politics of the
Caribbean and in the economy of England. However, beneath
the ground and the adjacent water of Kingston Harbor lies
the only sunken city in the New World, a city that played
a pivotal role in Caribbean politics and economics (Figure
1). Port Royal is one of the premier English archaeological
sites of the Americas. Founded soon after the conquest of the
island of Jamaica from the Spanish by an English invasion
force in 1655, it went through a spectacular rise involving rich
merchants, notorious pirates/privateers, and afluent planters.
Its inluence ended dramatically on 7 June 1692, when much
of the town sank during a disastrous earthquake. In 1692
Port Royal was arguably the largest English town in the New
World and was the most afluent with far reaching inluence.
Because of its signiicance as perhaps the best preserved 17thcentury English site in the world, comes a great responsibility
of all who undertake excavations of the site in terms of proper
excavation, careful recording, conservation of the recovered
material, and publishing the results. Equally demanding is
the responsibility of the Government of Jamaica to protect
the different areas of the town, properly house the recovered
material, conserve the artifacts, display and interpret the
recovered material, and properly develop the site for present
and future generations.
Background History
Visitors to Port Royal prior to the 1692 earthquake would
have been impressed with the multistoried brick buildings,
the high population density, and general appearance of
wealth when compared to the other English colonial towns in
the New World. Port Royal, with an estimated population of
7,000-8000, was the largest and most afluent English town
in the Americas at this time, rivaled in size and economic
importance only by Boston with 6,000 or so citizens All
the amenities and vices of any 17th-century port town were
present, and because of its loose living citizenry, it has been
referred to as ‘the wickedest city in the world.’ During its
heyday Port Royal covered some 21 hectares (52 acres)
and was laid out with broad unpaved streets, named after
familiar streets in London, each lined with buildings one to
four stories in height with brick sidewalks along the front of
many of the buildings. In 1692, the density of structures was
comparable to that of London and the rent was as high as that
paid in Cheapside, a high rent district of London. Following
the earthquake in 1692, when 13 hectares (33 acres) of the
town sank into the harbor, only 8 hectares (20 acres) survived
as an island at the end of the sand spit.
Port Royal, Jamaica
Nothing remotely analogous to 17th-century Port Royal
remains today. Visitors now see a small ishing town with
just over 2,000 citizens along with an abandoned 19th-century
British Naval Base and the headquarters of the Jamaican
Coast Guard. Very little exists above the ground to indicate
the past glory of Port Royal during its height in the 17thcentury, or during its prosperous days in the18th-century and
when it served as a British Naval Base. When the Naval Base
closed in 1905, it ended Port Royal’s prominent role in the
economy of Jamaica.
Environmental Havoc
Port Royal belongs to one of a select group of archaeological
sites which includes Pompeii and Herculaneum in Italy and
Ozette in the state of Washington. Sites such as these are
unique “catastrophic” sites – sites created by some disaster
that preserves the cultural features and material and the allimportant archaeological context. In undisturbed catastrophic
sites, the archaeologist is not dealing with a situation where
– over a long span of time – houses, shops, warehouses,
churches, and other buildings were constructed, added onto,
fell into disrepair, were abandoned, eventually collapsed, were
razed and then possibly built over. Port Royal is strikingly
different: after only 37 years of existence this bustling city
literally sank into the harbor in only a matter of minutes
during a severe earthquake preserving the all important in
situ provenance.
Port Royal is known for the unusually high number of
catastrophes that have struck it. The most signiicant disasters
causing extensive damage were the 1692 earthquake (which
submerged two thirds of the town), the 1703 ire (the town
was burned to the ground), the 1722 and 1744 hurricanes
(they both obliterated the town), the 1770 earthquake
(which destroyed the hospital), the 1815 ire (the town was
extensively burned), the 1907 earthquake (which heavily
damaged the Victoria Battery) and the 1951 hurricane (which
left only four buildings standing). All of these played a major
role in creating the different archaeological components
Figure 1: Aerial view of Port Royal situated at the tip of the
Palisadoes
0 Port Royal, Jamaica
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 2: Port Royal town plan with major
archaeological excavations
represented in the town. Taken as a whole, there are few sites
that can rival the potential at Port Royal to conduct research
on domestic, business, and military structures dating from the
17th- through the 20th-century.
Archaeological Excavations
Over the past four decades, the submerged parts of the 17thcentury town have received the most interest, but it is important
to stress that there are incomparable terrestrial opportunities as
well. Three major underwater archaeological excavations in
the areas of the old town submerged in Kingston Harbor have
been conducted over the past four decades (Figure 2). The
irst excavation was conducted by Edwin Link in cooperation
with the National Geographic Society and the Smithsonian
Institute. The 1959 Link excavations concentrated around
Fort James, Littleton’s Tavern, and the King’s Warehouse. The
second and largest excavation was conducted along Fisher’s
Row by Robert Marx in 1965-1967 in association with the
Institute of Jamaican Culture. The third and longest running
excavation (1981-1990) was directed by Donny Hamilton in
conjunction with the Institute of Nautical Archaeology, Texas
A&M University, and The Jamaican National Heritage Trust.
Hamilton’s excavations were located along Lime Street at
the intersections of High and Queen Street and resulted in
the recording of the best-preserved structures and in situ
artifacts. The underwater archaeological excavations have
revealed most dramatically the afluence of the old town, as
evidenced by the prevalence of brick buildings, the density
of construction, and the vast array of material culture in the
latest styles of the period.
In addition to the major underwater excavations, there
have been numerous small land excavations, but only two
major ones. Over the years, it has been the developments
and improvements in the town that have resulted in the
most damage to the archaeological record. The small land
excavations conducted usually in reaction to some form of
construction or development have been poorly managed and
documented, and most have not been published. Too often
readily available historical and archaeological information
are ignored when various utility and building projects are
undertaken. Historic documentation, old maps, and data
contributed by archaeologists are either not consulted or the
information is ignored.
Shipwrecks
There are known shipwrecks dating from the 17th- and 18thcenturies lying close to the seawall along the harbor side of
town. In fact the only archaeological evidence that can be
unequivocally equated to piracy and privateering is found in the
form of shipwrecks. During Robert Marx’s excavation (19651967), he located and tentatively identiied three shipwrecks.
Along the southeast side of the excavation area, one wreck
was identiied as the HMS Swan, a ifth-rate warship lost in the
1692 earthquake. When the excavation plans are studied, it is
obvious that the shipwreck Marx identiied as the HMS Swan
Port Royal, Jamaica 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 3: Underwater excavations conducted by the Institute of Nautical Archaeology and Robert Marx
lies in the old harbor, not within the boundaries of the town.
Since the ship lies outside the town boundary it cannot be the
HMS Swan, which is described as being careened at the time
of the earthquake and was washed into town, landing on top
of the house of Lord Pike. A better candidate for the Swan
is the ship excavated by Hamilton lying across the front wall
and loor of Building 4 located at the intersection of Lime and
Queen streets (Figure 3). Just west of the ship identiied by
Marx to be the Swan is another wreck identiied as the French
Prize, and at the north end of his excavation area is a ship
separated in two localities that Marx identiied as the 1722
Wreck on the basis of a 1721 French coin. Historic accounts
describe how Port Royal was overwhelmed by the sea and
26 merchant vessels along with 400 persons perished in the
harbor during the disastrous August 28, 1722 hurricane. A
contemporary observer mentions that only four man-of-wars
and two merchant ships survived the storm out of 50 sails in
the harbor. The 1722 ship was one of the vessels that sank
in this 1722 hurricane that demolished much of the town and
destroyed once and for all Port Royal’s chance to revive its
former prominence.
Tourism Development Plans
Over the past two decades there have been a number of
development plans for Port Royal to develop it into a major
tourism center. To date none have gone beyond the discussion
and planning stage because of the grandiose nature of most
of them and the lack of funding to carry them out. The latest
plan by the Port Royal Development Company Limited was
initiated in 1998 and includes plans for major development
in the land end of Lime Street, the Old Naval Yard, the area
of Chocolata Hole, the harbor area, Fort Charles, the center
of town, and pretty much every other area of the town. The
development plan has the potential to signiicantly impact,
and to some degree destroy parts of the archaeological
record in the affected areas. The Government of Jamaica
has the responsibility to see that the archaeological damage
is mitigated as much as possible and to make sure that there
is a knowledgeable archaeologist, well-versed in the history
and archaeology of the Port Royal, included in the planning
stages of the project.
More archaeological research needs to be conducted in
conjunction with any large scale development of the town of
Port Royal. There is great tourism development potential in
Port Royal and the economy of the depressed town needs to be
rejuvenated. The sunken remains of the sunken city are in an
archaeological preserve and diving is not permitted without
a permit. If supervised diving is to be allowed on the site, it
must be monitored and safe guards established to protect the
architectural remains and artifacts. Under the right conditions,
regulated diving could be allowed thus making this dramatic
archaeological site part of the present day economy as well
as allowing development of the terrestrial components of
the town. However, development must not compromise the
incomparable archaeological record that still lies untouched
beneath the ground and the water surrounding the town.
In Situ Site Stabilization
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
In Situ Site Stabilization:
The William Salthouse Case Study
Mark Staniforth
Department of Archaeology
Flinders University
Australia
Introduction
The wooden sailing vessel William Salthouse was wrecked
at Port Phillip Heads on Saturday 27 November 1841 at the
end of a trading voyage from Canada to the new Port Phillip
colony (Victoria) in Australia (Staniforth 2003). The remains
of the vessel were relocated in ten to thirteen metres of water
by two SCUBA divers during a drift dive in August 1982. As
far as can be determined, this was the irst time that divers
had visited the wreck site, since what was probably limited
salvage work ceased in about 1842 (Staniforth & Vickery
1984:4-5).
It is believed that the site had reached a state of relative
equilibrium with its environment over the 140 years since
wrecking, and only a very small part of the remaining
wooden hull structure and organic cargo material protruded
above the seabed. The vast majority of the material remains,
including the wooden hull structure and wooden-hooped
casks, lay buried within a large sand ridge (or sand wave)
approximately three metres high (Staniforth 1987).
Environmental Conditions
The wreck site is located on a sandy seabed covered with
highly mobile large and small sand waves. These sand waves
result from extremely strong tidal currents (up to six knots)
caused by the physical coniguration of Port Phillip Bay, a
large bay with a relatively narrow opening. The area is now too
deep for seagrass to grow, but early charts suggest that during
earlier times the water was shallower and the seabed probably
had a covering of seagrass. Exactly when, or how quickly,
the changes to the seabed lora and topography occurred are
impossible to establish with any certainty. Nevertheless, they
are considered likely to have resulted from human-inluenced
changes in the environmental conditions caused by factors
such as nearby channel dredging, the scallop ishery and
changes to water quality within Port Phillip Bay, most of
which occurred in the 20th-century.
Diver Disturbance
Generally, diving on the site is only possible at slack water
— a period lasting from a few minutes to over an hour at
the change of tide. The inding of the wreck of the William
Salthouse very quickly became common knowledge among
the diving community in Victoria and the surface of the
site was extensively disturbed by souvenir hunters over a
period of a few weeks in late 1982. The site was inspected
several times by maritime archaeologists from the Maritime
Archaeology Unit of the Victoria Archaeological Survey
(VAS) in December 1982 and on one occasion as many as
twelve dive boats and 60 divers were observed on the site.
The site was declared as an historic shipwreck under the
provision of the Historic Shipwrecks Act 1981 (Victoria), but
looting continued over the summers of 1982 and 1983, and on
9 February 1983 the site was declared as a 250-metre radius
protected zone (Harvey 1996:1-2). Protected zone status
meant that no diving was allowed within the protected zone,
and an effective enforcement program was put in place using
water police and inspectors appointed under the Historic
Shipwrecks Act 1981. Further inspections during March 1983
indicated that declaration as a protected zone had largely put
a stop to the site disturbance, but surface damage was already
clearly extensive.
Test Excavation
In order to establish the extent of the damage to the site and
to evaluate the amount of hull structure and cargo material
remaining, it was decided to conduct an emergency test
excavation during May 1983. The main aim of the test
excavation program was to produce a detailed site plan to aid
in future management of the site, and a secondary aim was
to conduct research into the stowage methods used aboard
the vessel. The wreck site is approximately 25 metres long
and 8 metres wide. Two trenches (each 2 metres wide and 8
metres long) were excavated across the site using airlifts - one
forward and one aft of the main mast (Staniforth & Vickery
1984:5-11). This represented less than 20% of the surface
area of the site, and excavation ceased when complete and
undisturbed cask or other cargo material was encountered.
The test excavation showed that while disturbance on the site
was extensive, this was restricted to the surface levels (0 to
0.3 metres), and below these levels most of the cargo material
was undisturbed.
Site-Monitoring and Public Access
After the test excavation program was completed, the William
Salthouse site remained a protected zone and was therefore
closed to public access and diving. A site-monitoring
program conducted by Maritime Archaeology Unit staff
was commenced, and in October 1983 increased scouring
was noted on the site. Further inspection of the site in 1984
indicated that scouring appeared to have been reduced, and
that the stern section of the wreck was then completely
covered by sand (Harvey 1996).
As a result of media coverage, public interest was high, and
divers wanted to be allowed to dive on the site. In order
to allow at least some public access, a permit system was
started in March 1984 which allowed a limited number of
divers (twelve) to visit the site at strictly controlled times.
The permit system was subsequently extensively used by
dive charter operators who were warned that evidence of site
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 1: Moving sea grass matting into
position (M. Staniforth)
Figure 2: Build up of stabilised sand
following placement of artificial sea
grass matting
Figure 3: Close-up of accumulated sand
and artificial sea grass fronds
In Situ Site Stabilization
In Situ Site Stabilization
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
disturbance could result in the coniscation of their boat for up
to 60 days. As a result dive charter operators strongly pushed
the “non-disturbance” provisions of the legislation to their
divers. Despite this, on-going monitoring of the site showed
that accidental damage was occurring. Some was caused by
poor buoyancy control among newly qualiied divers and
some surface disturbance was continuing as a result of handfanning by divers (Harvey 1996). Monitoring also showed
that sand was steadily moving off the site and sections of the
hull and cargo were becoming more exposed.
total of 42 mats were deployed around (but not over) the site
of the William Salthouse in 1990.
Early Site Stabilization Attempts
Conclusion
In 1985 the irst attempt was made to reduce scour and
increase sediment build-up over the site by positioning
ive small fences (0.4m high and 1.5m long) made of iron
reinforcing rod at right angles to the tidal current. These
fences caught mobile kelp and algae that rolled across the
seabed, which then resulted in sediment buildup in some
places, but increased scour in others. This experiment was
followed by several other unsuccessful attempts to increase
the sand cover over the site including using a water dredge to
pump sand onto parts of the site and bulk dumping of several
hundred tons of sand onto the site from the dredge Matthew
Flinders. Finally in 1987 the site was closed to diving again
and a temporary solution using hessian sandbags to support
undermined sections of the hull was put in place (Hosty 1988).
By 1989, however, the hessian sandbags were beginning to
break down and a more permanent solution was sought.
Artificial Sea Grass Matting
Artiicial sea grass matting made from closed-cell foamed
polypropylene (Cegrass Erosion Control System) was
purchased from Cebo UK Ltd based in Aberdeen, Scotland.
Twenty-four strips (each 1.6 cm wide by either 90 cm, 120
cm or 150 cm long) were attached to a plastic clip and then
to an iron reinforcing rod mesh (6m by 2.4 m with a 0.2m
square mesh size) to create an artiicial sea grass mat. The
mats were weighted with 30 cm lengths of railway iron and a
Sediment deposition around the wrecksite increased
immediately. Even over the site where no sea grass matting
had been placed, sand began to build up. Minor adjustments
to the placement of sea grass mats to eliminate the remaining
problems with scouring and a regular monitoring program
took place over the next three years to ensure the stability of
the site. Public access via the permit system was reinstituted
in 1993.
Artiicial sea grass proved to be an effective method of site
stabilization on the wrecksite of the William Salthouse. The
overall cost of the project was approximately A$100,000
making it a cost-effective option for site stabilization for
wooden wrecks threatened by loss of sediment cover as
a result of environmental change exacerbated by human
inluences.
Information Sources
Harvey, P. 1996. “A review of stabilization work on the wreck of
the William Salthouse in Port Phillip Bay.” The Bulletin of the
Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology. 20.2:1-8.
Hosty, K. 1988. “Bagging the William Salthouse: site stabilization
work on the William Salthouse.” The Bulletin of the Australian
Institute for Maritime Archaeology. 12.1:13-16.
Staniforth, M. 1987. “The casks from the wreck of the William
Salthouse,” The Australian Journal of Historical Archaeology. 5:2128.
Staniforth, M. 2003. “Early Trade Between Canada and Australia
and the Wreck of the William Salthouse (1841),” In Roy, Christian,
Jean Bélisle, Marc-André Bernier and Brad Loewen, eds., Mer et
Monde. Questions d’archéologie maritime, Collection hors série 1,
Montréal, Association des Archéologues du Québec, pp. 212-228.
Staniforth, M. & Vickery, L. 1984. “The test excavation of the
William Salthouse wreck site: an interim report.” The Australian
Institute for Maritime Archaeology Special Publication No. 3.
The Solway
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
A Cheap and Effective Method of
Protecting Underwater Cultural Heritage
Cosmos Coroneos
Director
Cosmos Archaeology Pty Ltd
Australia
Australia’s underwater cultural heritage is diverse and
extensive. The allocation of the limited resources available
to protect this heritage is prioritised through balancing
competing cultural heritage values of individual sites with an
assessment of threat to that site’s physical integrity.
Iconic or well known sites justiiably receive the lion’s share of
attention as they are usually, by the nature of their popularity,
under immediate threat. Mitigation measures commonly
involve public programmes and policing as well as elaborate
and innovative site stabilisation. Rescue excavations have
been undertaken in extreme circumstances when the options
of in situ preservation have been found, or predicted to be,
ineffective.
The UNESCO Convention for the Protection of Underwater
Heritage does not discriminate between sites based on
cultural heritage value. However, not all sites of underwater
cultural heritage are faced with equal threats. The majority of
Australia’s underwater cultural sites are under low to moderate
threat and such sites are understandably given less attention.
Nevertheless, the forces of nature and collateral cultural
impacts relentlessly erode the cultural values of such sites
through a gradual yet irretrievable loss of fabric and context.
The preservation of these sites is still an imperative.
This article outlines practical steps which conform to the
Convention’s Articles and Rules and that were taken for the in
situ preservation of one such site, the Solway, a 337 ton ship,
wrecked at Rosetta Harbor , South Australia in 1837. The
preservation measures implemented were simple, reversible
and of little cost to the State. This relatively small outlay of
time and money retarded the deleterious effects of natural
agents on this site.
The method used to protect the site involved the placement
of bags illed with sand over exposed parts of partially buried
timbers. The use of sandbags in this way is not uncommon
in Australia and is a much used instrument in the tool kit of
the underwater cultural resource manager. Such a method,
of course, is not applicable in all circumstances; it is most
effective when dealing with low relief sites of which a
signiicant proportion is buried in sediment.
The Solway is located approximately 500 metres offshore
and in 3 metres of water. The site has been known since the
early 1960s. The irst inspection of the Solway by the State’s
cultural resource management agency took place in 1982. Its
historical signiicance, being South Australia’s second oldest
known shipwreck (by two weeks) and the earliest located
shipwreck in the State, enhanced by its relatively high state
of preservation, led to the site being declared an Historic
Figure 1: Sandbags on the Solway (C. Coroneos)
Shipwreck under the South Australian Historic Shipwrecks
Act 1981.
In early 1994 the site was inspected as part of a Regional
Survey Programme. It was found that considerable structural
remains of the hull remained intact. The amount of sand
covering, in places, and the extent of the remains suggested
that a considerable part of the site, from the turn of bilge
to keel, was buried. This also suggested that the site could
contain a considerable amount of artefacts, including cargo.
The 1994 inspection of the site noted that some deterioration
of the site had occurred since the early 1980s. Deliberations
by the State Heritage Branch on the appropriate management
response prompted a review of the signiicance assessment
of the Solway.
Built at Monkswearmouthshore, Sunderland, England in
1829, the Solway was a trading vessel with an unremarkable
history. When wrecked in December of 1837 it had been in
South Australia for two months under charter to the South
Australia Company, having sailed from Hamburg with 52
German migrants and cargo. The vessel was driven onto a reef
in storm whilst loading whale oil from the whaling stations
established in Encounter Bay. There were no fatalities.
The review found that that the Solway’s signiicance extended
beyond the supericial historical association as one of the
irst ships known to have been lost in South Australia. The
wreck of the Solway is also of historical signiicance because
it symbolised the economic and logistical follies committed
by the initial European settlers to South Australia. The site
had enhanced archaeological signiicance as it possibly
contained cultural material evidence of the irst German
settlers to the State.
The Solway
To better ascertain the archaeological signiicance of the
Solway a test excavation was conducted in April 1994, with
the aim of determining the variety and extent of the remains
of cargo and personal possessions on the site.
The test excavation revealed that the site had considerable
archaeological and research potential. It was discovered
that much more of the vessel’s structure had survived than
was initially assessed. This was a result of the vessel being
situated on a reef composed of relatively soft calcareous
limestone. From the time of impact until the breakdown of
hull from marine borer infestation and wave action, the keel
and bilge of the vessel would have been grinding down the
soft reef rock upon which it rested, the weight of the hull
given momentum by the constant southerly swells. This
would have had the effect of creating a depression in the reef
which was illed with sand, thereby preserving the wreck
from the turn of the bilge to the keel.
During the test excavation it was also observed that much of
the timber that was exposed was “fresh,” i.e. not damaged
by marine borers. However, only a few centimetres of sand
covered the wide expanse of timber loors and planking in
the centre of the site, whereas anecdotal information prior to
the 1980s indicated that in previous times the site was almost
completely covered .
An assessment of the threats to the site indicated that there
were no potential, direct, cultural impacts through seabed
development, anchoring or looting. However, observations
and anecdotal evidence from the site did not reveal whether
the recent loss of sand cover was an ongoing, one way process,
or a seasonal effect. This posed a management problem.
Figure 2: Recording the Solway (B. Jeffery)
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Solway was one of many archaeological sites under the
State Heritage Branch. Other sites had been assessed to be
under greater threat and therefore required a greater share
of the agency’s time and resources. However, to leave the
site alone allowed for the likelihood of the continued erosion
of sediment resulting in the loss of structural integrity and
what remained of the intra-site contexts. In addition, the site
would become increasingly vulnerable to looting.
It was decided to take immediate steps to stabilise the site
using sandbags, pending the availability of funds to further
investigate the site. The application of sandbags on the
exposed timbers would protect the site from two prevalent
threats, both biological and mechanical. By artiicially
replacing the sand over the site, the wreck timbers would
be reintroduced to anaerobic conditions thereby limiting the
ravages of marine borers. The sandbags would also protect
the site from mechanical damage in the form of sand abrasion
or larger objects being propelled through the water during
storms. The placing of sandbags also served as a minor
deterrent to inquisitive divers. As the area was not commonly
frequented by boats, there was little fear that the sandbags
would be disturbed by dragging anchors.
The sandbags would also serve to act as a sediment trap and
the surface of the bags were suficiently rough to attract the
colonisation of marine growth, which in turn would accelerate
the rate sedimentation. Polyester sandbags were used, as it
was feared that Hessian bags would deteriorate before marine
growth could take hold.
The initial deployment of sandbags involved three days of
work, illing the bags with clean sand, taking them out and
placing them over the freshly exposed timbers. Care was
taken to lay the sandbags lat so as to maximise the amount
of coverage. The costs were limited to the purchasing of
1,000 sandbags, suficient sand, accommodation, fuel and the
wages of one State Heritage Ofice staff member. Assistance
was provided by volunteers.
In conjunction with the deployment of the sandbags, a
monitoring programme was initiated. The purpose of the
programme was to gauge the condition of the sandbags,
possible disturbances by divers, the effects of storms, the rate
of sedimentation and marine growth on the bags, the creation
and effects of scouring around the sandbags, and the exposure
of other parts of the site.
Subjective observations of sand movements were noted on
a copy of the site plan attached to an underwater dive slate.
Newly exposed remains and previously exposed remains that
had become buried were also noted. Quantitative data of sand
movement were obtained from taking measurements from
established stations – brass rods hammered into the seabed
– around the site. Photographs were taken at each inspection
from predetermined locations to obtain a “time lapse” record
of the site. Records were also kept of the weather patterns in
the area for three days prior to each inspection.
Six months into the monitoring programme another 300
sandbags were laid over parts of the site that were consistently
exposed prior to 1994 and on timbers that had recently
The Solway
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
become exposed. A further 500 sandbags were deposited on
the seabed near the site for future use if required.
The regular inspection of the site after the initial deployment
of the sandbags was a critical part of the site preservation
process. It was observed that the sandbag mound on the
most vulnerable parts of the site modiied water movement
patterns which resulted in scouring around the bags, thereby
exposing more timbers. With regular inspections and a “bag
depot” available nearby, it was possible to continually cover
newly exposed timbers.
Regular inspections also allowed an investigation of the
effect of the sand bags on sand movements across the wider
site. The collation of measured observations on site made
before and during the monitoring programme showed that the
greater part of the site became exposed during the summer
months. This seasonal exposure of the site revealed timbers
damaged by marine borers as well as “fresh” un-infested
timbers. The monitoring programme allowed for reinements
to be made to the protection and stabilisation of the Solway
wreck site.
The sandbagging of the Solway is not a unique or innovative
form of underwater cultural resource management. However,
it is often worth being reminded that underwater sites can be
physically protected cheaply, quickly and effectively with
minimal effort, all the while conforming with the principles
and rules of the UNESCO Convention for the Protection of
Underwater Cultural Heritage.
Figure 3: The Solway in the 1980s
(B. Jeffery)
Information Sources
Cosmos Coroneos, May 1995, “Solway Preliminary Report On The
Monitoring And Stabilisation Programme.” Unpublished report for
the (former) State Heritage Branch of South Australia.
Cosmos Coroneos, 1996, “The Solway (1837): Results of the 1994
test excavation.” In The Bulletin of the Australian Institute for
Maritime Archaeology, Vol. 20, Number 1
Cosmos Coroneos, 1997, “Shipwrecks of Encounter Bay and
Backstairs Passage.” South Australian Maritime Heritage Series No.
3. Department of Environment and Natural Resources, Adelaide,
South Australia; Australian Institute for Maritime Archaeology
Special Publication No. 8.
The Avondster
The In Situ Protection of a Dutch
Colonial Vessel in Sri Lankan Waters
M. R. Manders
Maritime Heritage Oficer
Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek
(ROB; National Service for Archaeological Heritage)
The Netherlands
On the 2nd of July 1659, during a calm night, a Dutch
Eastindiamen (VOC), called the Avondster, ran ashore in
Galle Harbour in the south of Sri Lanka and wrecked. The
ship had been loading a cargo of areca nuts (Areca Catechu)
for India. These are the seeds of a palm tree and an ingredient
of sirih, a kind of chew (Figure 1).
By observing the remains of the ship, this is what probably
happened: the stern of the Avondster hit the sandy seabed and
ran ashore on a gradually sloping sandy coast near the Dutch
Fort of Galle. Due to the constant pressure of the waves, the
sternpost broke off from the rest of the ship. The waves were
also responsible for the breaking of the portside under the
bilge and the starboard side just above the irst deck. Fine
luvial sediment of the river that deposited its water and
waste into the bay and coarser marine sand covered the entire
wreck. It must have been covered with ine sand and silt very
soon after wrecking, which left it in an anaerobic condition
for many centuries. In comparison to most other wrecks in
tropical waters, the conservation conditions were extremely
good for a long time, protecting a large part of the Avondster’s
wooden structure (Figure 2).
A few decades ago, a road and stone barrier were built only
50 metres away from the site. Since then the environment
has been very unstable. In the early 1990s, the wreck was
discovered during a survey project of Galle Harbour. The
Figure 1: Location of the Avondster wreck in Galle Harbour
(Drawing M. Manders/M.Kosian)
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Galle Harbour project started in 1993 and lasted three years.
It was a co-operation between the Department of Archaeology
(Sri Lanka), the Central Cultural Fund (Sri Lanka), the
Post Graduate Institute of Archaeology (Sri Lanka) and the
Western Australian Maritime Museum (Australia).
The Avondster excavation project was a follow up of this
project and is a joint venture of the Mutual Heritage Centre
of the Central Cultural Fund (Sri Lanka), the University of
Amsterdam (the Netherlands), The Amsterdam Historical
Museum (the Netherlands) and the Western Australian
Maritime Museum (Australia). At the start of the Avondster
project, the decision was made to safeguard the valuable
archaeological information of the wreck site by excavation.
Many objects will be preserved ex situ, but the idea is to
leave the wreck itself in situ. Information about the ship
construction will be gathered underwater. The inds are being
conserved in a laboratory near the site especially created for
the Avondster project.
Throughout the years we have seen the Avondster’s wooden
construction being destroyed by wood-eating organisms,
erosion, as well as human activities such as ishing and
diving. Not only the ship, but also objects that belong to the
inventory, cargo and the persons on board are deteriorating
and moved all over the wreck site by swell, currents, waves,
and breakers. This means loss of archaeological information.
The turbulent sea at the site possibly also makes the water
oxygen-rich from time to time. This, together with the large
amount of organic waste found on the site and dumped in
the water, make the area extremely favourable for organisms
attacking organic archaeological material.
The excavation of the Avondster wreck started in 2001 but
probably will go on for many years to come. Considering
the speed of degradation on the site, the decision was made
to physically protect the site in order not to lose much
information prior to this excavation. A method of physical
protection needed to be designed that would protect the
wreck and its contents against:
1. Natural erosion and scouring caused by sea and
weather
2. Objects being moved all over the site
3. Wood-eating organisms
4. Looting
5. Fishing activities
6. Chemical degradation, including the corrosion of metal
objects (if possible)
Also taken into consideration was the need for the method
to be inexpensive, the materials easy to buy in Sri Lanka,
the protection easy to install and easy to remove so that the
excavation in trenches could continue.
We decided to test a method that was already in use in the
Netherlands: covering a site with polypropylene nets. These
nets promote sand deposit that will cover the site and leave
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Avondster
Figure 2: The exposed site of the
Avondster. After so many centuries,
much of its wood is still preserved
(R. Muthucumarana)
Figure 3: Schematic
impression on where
the polypropylene nets
have been placed on the
Avondster wreck
(R. Muthucumarana)
Figure 4: Sand is penetrating the little
holes in the net, covering the wrecksite
with a protective sediment layer
(R. Muthucumarana)
0 The Avondster
it protected in an anaerobic environment. These tests were
executed in February 2003, and because the results were
very promising, an effort was made to cover the whole site in
November that same year. The non-woven polypropylene net
is fabricated in Sri Lanka and is normally used for iltering
water and for shrimp ishing. In December 2003, the whole
bow section was covered with ive nets that were 4 meters wide
and 25 meters long. They are placed squared on the wreck
site covering the hull and the area where parts of the brokenoff starboard side are possibly still lying under the sand. The
strips of netting are weighted at both ends with sandbags. On
the site, the nets extend 4 metres out of the portside of the
wreck and 8 metres and more from the starboard side because
here more parts of the wreck and objects are expected to be
found (Figure 3).
The results of the protection are even more promising than the
irst test. Within one week after installation, the whole bow
side was covered again with sand. This means that in places
there was sediment buildup of more than 1 metre. Finally,
the whole site has to be protected in order to be effective.
For this protection, fourteen nets with a width of 4 metres
width and a length of 25 meters are needed. The total material
cost of this physical protection of the Avondster wreck (about
500 square metres) is approximately € 2,000. The complete
covering of the site has not been executed yet (Figure 4).
After the protective nets have been installed on the site,
this in situ protection has to be maintained. Because of the
shallowness of the site, it is obvious that monsoons might
have an enormous effect on the environmental conditions
at the Avondster. For this project, a monitoring scheme was
developed, with visual observations on a regular basis.
On the 26th of December 2004, a Tsunami hit Galle Harbour
with incredible force. It was thought that it would have
affected the conditions on the site. Eyewitnesses state that
just before the big wave entered the Galle Harbour, the wreck
itself became exposed. Surprisingly, monitoring in April
2005, three months after the Tsunami, revealed that hardly
any damage was done to the wreck site and its protection.
The covered bow site was still covered with a thick layer of
sand. Even in these conditions the protection seems to be
effective.
Conclusions and Consideration
The Bay of Galle has tidal inluences but most of the sediment
is moved over the seabed by high swell and surge caused
by the stone barrier near the site. This caused heavy erosion
and abrasion of the Avondster site for many years, exposing
it to further natural, biological and human deterioration.
The protective measurements with polypropylene nets that
were executed in 2003 have the opposite effect. Sand that is
transported over the wreck site falls down the holes of the
net and settles due to the fact that there is hardly any water
movement under the net. It creates an anaerobic environment
comparable to the conditions in which the wreck has been
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
protected for a few centuries. At the bow where this protection
was executed, it worked extremely well. It stopped abrasion
and attack by woodborers; probably the most siginiicant
causes of degradation at the Avondster site.
To protect the wreck site effectively prior to excavation, the
whole construction has to be again covered with sand. The site
will then be a sloping mound of sand and nets within a few
months. Within a few years it will be an artiicial mound that
will prove to be very dificult for looters to enter. However,
with the proper equipment, like water dredges or airlifts, the
protection is easy to remove. The wreck can then be easily
excavated in parts, while the rest of the site is still protected.
Regular, ongoing monitoring of the site is important. At a
shallow site like the Avondster, high swells and bad weather
conditions, which are abundant during the monsoon season,
form a potential threat. However, it is also important to keep
in mind that some degradation will occur, whatever measures
we take. However, we can slow down or stop a number
of processes responsible for the deterioration of different
materials. If the excavation of the Avondster continues, the
contents of the wreck will be preserved ex situ without these
negative inluences. Although some deterioration of the
wreck will continue slowly (e.g. bacterial decay), it will be
well protected in situ for many years to come.
Further Reading
Björdahl, C.G., G. Daniel, T. Nilsson, “Depth of burial, an important
factor in controlling bacterial decay of waterlogged archaeological
poles,” International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation 45, 2000,
15-26.
Chandraratne, W. M, A.M.A. Dayananda, M.R. Manders, R.
Muthucumarana, K.B.C. Weerasena, K.D.P. Weerasingha, “Report
on the excavation and archaeological training at the Avondster site
in Sri Lanka. Third period: 17th of February – 15th of March 2003.”
Internal Report Maritime Archaeological Unit, Sri Lanka, 2003.
Jefferey, Bill & R. Muthucumarana, “The Tsunami effects. Based on
the ongoing assignment to assess the damagers and changers to the
underwater archaeological sites in Galle harbour.” Internal Report
Maritime Archaeological Unit, 2005.
Manders, Martijn, “The BZN 10-wreck, threatened by nature?, in:
Jeremy Green and Myra Stanbury (eds.),” Bulletin of the Australasian
Institute for Maritime Archaeology (2002), 26: 99-104.
Manders, M.R., “Safeguarding: The physical protection of
underwater sites,” MoSS Newsletter 4, 2003, 18-22.
Manders, M.R., W.M. Chandraratne, A.M.A. Dayananda, R.
Muthucumarana, K.B.C. Weerasena, K.D.P. Weerasingha, “The
physical protection of a 17th century VOC shipwreck in Sri Lanka,”
Current Science, 86, 9, may 2004 (b), p. 101-107.
Sri Lanka Maritime Archaeological Unit Report on the Avondster
Project 2001-2002, in: Sri Lanka Maritime Archaeological Unit
Publication no.1, Eds: R. Parthesius (et al), 2003.
Weerasinha, K.D. Palita, “The physical protection of the Avondster
wreck site.” Internal report Maritime Archaeological Unit, Sri
Lanka, 2004.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Managing Threats to Underwater Cultural Heritage Sites:
The Yongala as a Case Study
The Yongala Case Study 1
Andrew Viduka
Conservator and Yongala Site Manager
Museum of Tropical Queensland
Australia
SS Yongala (1911) was a luxury passenger steamer which
foundered and sank during a cyclonic event approximately
12 nautical miles from Cape Bowling Green and 45 nautical
miles south of Townsville, Queensland, Australia, in what is
now a part of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park. The Yongala
was an early 20th-century interstate coastal steamer which
supplies a snapshot of Edwardian life in Australia. The wreck
lies structurally intact and is host to an amazing diversity of
marine life. The wreck has been listed as a gravesite and a
signiicant historic, archaeological, social, scientiic and
interpretive site. The degree of signiicance as determined by
the Guidelines for the Management of Australia’s Historic
Shipwrecks is assessed as being both “rare and representative.”
The shipwreck is also one of Australia’s most popular wreck
diving experiences.
Figure 1: SS Yongala (Courtesy of A.D. Edwards Collection in the
State Library of South Australia)
Management of the Yongala shipwreck by the Museum of
Tropical Queensland (MTQ) illustrates the holistic approach
to cultural heritage preservation epitomised in the general
principles of the UNESCO Convention for the protection of
underwater cultural heritage.
The Shipwreck Incident
with no desire to indulge in idle speculation, simply ind that
after becoming lost to view by the light keeper at Dent Island,
the fate of the Yongala passes beyond human ken into the realms
of conjecture, to add one more to the mysteries of the sea...
The Yongala was built in 1903 by Armstrong, Whitworth and
Co. in Newcastle-on-Tyne, England. The vessel was powered
by a large triple expansion engine driving a single propeller.
The vessel was 363 feet in length and of iron, steel and wood
construction. The vessel was employed on a Melbourne to
Cairns run from 1907 to its sinking in 1911.
On March 23rd 1911 at 1:40 pm the Yongala left Mackay for
Townsville but sank in or after cyclonic conditions with the
loss of all aboard, reportedly 121 people, although an unlisted
servant may have also have been aboard.
Location and Site Conditions
The Yongala lies in open waters in Cape Bowling Green
Bay in the central section of the Great Barrier Reef Marine
Park (Latitude 190 18’ 16’’ South, Longitude 1470 37’ 19’’
East). The site is adjacent to a major shipping channel with
shipping trafic passing on both the east and west of the site.
The site is clearly marked on all nautical charts as an historic
shipwreck.
Figure 2: Shipping traffic past Yongala wreck site from Australian
Maritime Safety Authority
Figure 3: Approximate location of Yongala in relation to Queensland
coastline and Great Barrier Reef
(http://www.townsvilleholidays.info/)
The Yongala Case Study
The wreck sits intact on the seabed, listing to starboard on
an angle of 60-70°. The depth of water to the sea loor is
approximately 27-30m, with the upper sections of the wreck
approximately 16 meters below the surface. The sealoor
surrounding the wreck is sandy. Strong currents scour the
area, constantly exposing or covering parts of the hull and
starboard side decking.
The site is fully exposed to all weather conditions. The
summer period is the cyclone season with a peak around
January to March. In winter, south easterlies up to gale force
can occur, causing large swells to develop.
Threats to the Site - Environmental and Human
The Yongala is subject to its own unique blend of
environmental and human threats. Since the Yongala is an
iron hulled vessel, the predominant threat is corrosion with
subsequent loss of structural integrity. Since the wreck
sits proud on the seabed, the site is predominantly affected
by aerobic corrosion with the rate of oxygen access to the
residual metal being the controlling step in the corrosion
process.
While storm events may happen regularly with varying
degrees of impact on the site, cyclones happen only rarely
near the Yongala. However, when a cyclone does happen it
has major implications for the wreck’s condition. This point
was proven by Cyclone Aivu in 1989. The force of water
movement and associated sandblasting during the cyclone
dislodged a memorial plinth cemented to the bow area and
scoured a large portion of the wreck clean of concretion.
Human threats to the site are generally less dramatic in their
effect than cyclones, but cumulatively are signiicant. In 1994
under Section 7 of the Historic Shipwrecks Act, a provision
was added to the permit conditions for divers, making
penetration diving illegal. Penetration diving can cause two
different types of damage that accelerate corrosion: loss of
concretion through mechanical damage and the buildup of
oxygen concentration (air pockets) inside the ship wreck’s
conined spaces.
One of the most signiicant threats to the site in the years
subsequent to its re-discovery was removal of ixtures
and ittings from the vessel. This happened primarily
through uncontrolled souveniring. Accelerated corrosion is
measurable near locations where portholes were removed
from the wreck. Ironically the illicit salvage of the Yongala’s
single bronze propeller circa 1971 has most likely assisted in
the preservation of the wreck by removing the largest galvanic
couple on the site that would have eventually accelerated the
corrosion of the stern area.
More recently dive boats have been the main human threat to
the site due to damage associated with anchoring. The site is
in open fetch conditions subject to strong currents and wind.
Dive boats have been known to drag their anchors over the
wreck site, causing signiicant loss of concretion, as well as
to drop their anchor directly onto the wreck causing physical
damage.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Since the site is not only a shipwreck but an artiicial reef
supporting incredible diversity of marine life, mechanical
damage to the wreck’s corals reduces its aesthetic value. In
the last three years an average of 7,774 divers per year have
dived the site. Their level of personal skill and buoyancy
control varies signiicantly and sometimes results in damage
to the coral. Another threat to the site’s marine diversity was
ishing. This was a serious threat to the wreck’s artiicial
reef ecosystem up until 1984 when the Great Barrier Reef
Marine Park Authority declared the section in which the
Yongala is situated as a Marine National Park B zone. This
zone designation prohibits ishing, aquaculture, bait netting,
crabbing, harvest ishing, research without a permit, tourist
programs without a permit and shipping without a permit.
Managing Threats
Under the UNESCO Convention for Protection of Underwater
Cultural Heritage both formal and informal approaches are
recommended to manage threats to sites. In the context of
the Yongala, managing environmental threats is neither
cost-effective nor practicable. For example, the theoretical
installation of a large number of sacriicial anodes to mitigate
against the corrosion cycle would require an enormous
amount of human resources and signiicant ongoing inancial
commitment beyond the resources of the MTQ.
The management of threats to the Yongala site therefore
focuses on the management of dive operators and diver
interaction with the ship wreck. These interactions are
controlled by legislation and enforcement as well as education
as recommended in the UNESCO Convention.
Legislative protections for the Yongala are:
1981 the Yongala was gazetted as an historic shipwreck
under Section 5 of the Commonwealth Historic
Shipwrecks Act 1976
• 1982 the site was listed on the register of the National
Estate
• 1983 it was also listed under Section 7 of the Historic
Shipwrecks Act 1976 which supplies a protected zone of
500 meter radius around the site
• 1984 the site was included in the Central Zone of the
Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
Under the Historic Shipwreck Act the site is protected for
its heritage value while being made available to users for
recreational and educational purposes. The Act proscribes
activities that detrimentally impact on the site and its
associated artefact assemblage. This emphasis on the public’s
right of access and responsibilities on site relects the values
of the UNESCO convention.
•
Formal approaches to managing threats include site
planning, legislation and regulation combined with policing
and prosecution. Informal approaches are communications
focussed and targeted at individual divers and dive
operators.
Within the framework of the existing legislation the MTQ
prepared a Conservation and Management Plan for the Yongala
The Yongala Case Study
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
mitigate against it from an archaeological perspective. This
process involves communication with the dive industry,
local university, user groups, federal and state governments’
regulatory authorities, and is placed within the framework of
the MTQ’s staff and resources. As part of this planning process
the irst signiicant conservation assessment of the wreck was
initiated. This includes a combination of non-destructive
techniques such as video and still photo documentation and a
corrosion survey. This work is being carried out in conjunction
with operators, divers, the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park
Authority as well as the Environmental Protection AgencyNational Parks and Wildlife division.
Figure 4: Yongala Moorings Layout
in 2001 to identify and make recommendations on outstanding
issues. Following on from a number of recommendations in
the report, in 2002 a moorings infrastructure was put into
place with funding from the National Moorings Program.
The moorings comprise ive vessel mooring points, two
diver access points and one mooring point with an associated
isolated danger mark buoy.
With the moorings infrastructure in place, anchoring within
the 500m protected zone was banned and no anchor damage
has been subsequently reported.
Not only have the moorings been a success from the point of
reduced damage to the shipwreck, but from the operator and
diver safety perspectives. Recent consultation with operators
has guaranteed ongoing operational funding for the moorings
based on a user-pays system. This result has come about
through a process of communication and engagement with
each operator and other regulatory bodies. Another outcome
from this recent meeting is unanimous support from dive
operators for each company to present their formal business
plan, environmental management plan and signed diver code
of behaviour agreement before being issued with a permit.
This is being proposed by operators in a bid to improve the
quality of dive tourism on the site.
Another strategy put forward by MTQ was engaging diving
operators to raise the standards of diving practice by tying in
a diving code of behaviour with operator interest. Education
of operators in the importance of preserving the site has also
resulted in the irst successful prosecution in Australia under
the no penetration dive restriction incorporated in the Historic
Shipwrecks Act. In 2003 an operator supplied an appropriate
pre-dive brieing on deck encompassing restrictions to diver
activities while on site. This brieing was ignored by a diver,
and that person was witnessed entering the wreck. The dive
operator called the police and supplied evidence against the
diver which resulted in a legal irst — the diver was ined
$2,000 for making an illegal dive on the Yongala. With the
operator’s evidence, the prosecutor proved that the diver
had “ample opportunity to know that the dive was a no
penetration dive” and that the Yongala is designated not only
as an “historic shipwreck, but as a grave site.”
Since eventual collapse of the site is a certainty, MTQ has
initiated a planning process to prepare for the event and to
Under the UNESCO convention object recovery for the
protection of the underwater cultural heritage is allowed.
As part of MTQ’s mitigation plan, an assessments of the
following are addressed:
•
•
•
Signiicance of individual objects
Potential information loss associated with collapse of the
Yongala
Ability of the museum to fund the excavation,
conservation and publication of any rescue archaeology
is being addressed.
This will be developed as per the project design framework
laid out in the Annex of the UNESCO convention.
Since public education is critical to the management of
sites and the mitigation of human threats to the site, MTQ
is investing its resources in on site and display interpretive
material, pamphlets and web based information, while
continuing its policy of face to face engagement with
operators and divers.
Information Sources
Australian Maritime Safety Authority (2005), Yongala Shipping,
Navigation Safety, Maritime Safety & Environmental Strategy.
Brisbane Daily Mail 28.3.1911 “The Mystery of the Yongala.”
Gleeson, M., (2000) SS Yongala - Townsville’s Titanic, National
Library of Australia ISBN 0 646 37781 7.
Henderson, G., (Ed) (1994), “Guidelines for the management
of Australia’s shipwrecks,” Australian Institute for Maritime
Archaeology and the Australian Cultural Development Ofice,
Canberra.
MacLeod, I.D., (1989) “The application of corrosion science to the
management of maritime archaeological sites”, Bulletin Australian
Institute maritime Archaeology 13(2):7-16.
Moran, V., (2001) “SS Yongala (1903-1911) A Conservation and
Management Plan December 2001.” Unpublished Report, Museum
of Tropical Queensland, Townsville, Australia.
Townsville Bulletin 13-12-1997 “The Yongala reveals her secrets”
by Murray Cornish.
Townsville Bulletin 15-7-2003 “American diver ined for
Yongala violation” by Malcolm Weatherup.
Viduka, A., Doyle, C., and Veth, P., (2002) “Development of in
situ conservation protocols on historic shipwrecks within the Great
Barrier Reef Marine Park”, Unpublished report to Queensland
Community Cultural Heritage Incentive Program, Environmental
Protection Agency, May 2002.
To Dig or not to Dig?
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
To Dig or not to Dig?
The Example of the Shipwreck of the Elizabeth and Mary
Marc-André Bernier
Underwater Archaeology Service
Parks Canada
The Urgency of Emergency Excavations
Each day cultural heritage managers face a range of issues
requiring them to make complex, even dificult decisions.
These problems often relate to the delicate balance between,
on the one hand, the interests of various groups whose
activities either focus on cultural remains or are carried out
in the immediate environment of these remains, and on the
other hand, the responsibility to provide heritage protection.
On other occasions, the potential impact results from the
natural features requiring action where the schedule and time
frame are beyond the manager’s control. Needless to say,
underwater heritage is not immune to these realities, and it
actually presents unique problems because the remains are
immersed.
Figure 1: Diver recording the plan of in situ remains of Elizabeth
and Mary durring the process of site evaluation in 1995
(Marc-André Bernier)
This can be a heavy responsibility for underwater heritage
managers if they do not have guidelines to provide clear
direction and ensure consistency and continuity of action.
These guidelines can be policies, directives, or even
legislation. No matter what form they take, they must be
clear enough so that the action to be taken is not left to drift
because of individual interpretation, and lexible enough so
that the manager is not put in an administrative straightjacket
that limits effectiveness.
The salvage excavations of the Elizabeth and Mary are
excellent examples of matching a lexible approach with
the application of professional principles and rigorous ethics
in order to salvage a unique feature of North American
heritage.
The Discovery
On December 24, 1994, a sport diver in Baie-Trinité, Quebec,
discovered the remains of a shipwreck recently uncovered by
one of the violent storms in the St. Lawrence Estuary. The
remains visible at the time of discovery included a section of
wooden hull and an area of ballast stone mixed with artefacts,
the variety of type and material of which were surprising. The
very loose sandy bottom helped keep the objects extremely
well preserved over the centuries, but its relative luidity,
along with the combined effect of waves and wind, had
exposed the site to such an extent that its very survival was
now threatened. At the time of discovery, the identity of the
vessel shipwrecked in Baie-Trinité was unknown. Preliminary
typological analyses pointed to a late 17th-century vessel,
possibly English in origin.
A process to protect the site was set in motion as soon as
the wreck was reported to provincial and federal authorities.
Both orders of government immediately began working
together on an emergency stabilization project, and a marine
archaeologist was sent to try to stabilize the most fragile
components of the site while gathering as much information
as possible in order to conirm the identiication of the wreck.
The imminent freeze of part of the water covering the site
called for immediate action, the top priority being to protect
the remains in situ. Sandbags were therefore placed on the
most vulnerable objects to protect them until the ice melted
in the spring.
Non-Intrusive Assessment
Followed by an Excavation
The data gathered during the emergency response conirmed
that the site dated back to New France. They also conirmed
the precarious situation of the remains. Freshly unearthed,
these remains were exposed to a new wave of deterioration
following a period of clear stabilization. It must be understood
that a shipwreck site generally experiences various cycles of
stability and instability. Following a period of accelerated
deterioration that occurs when the vessel settles on the
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
sea loor, the site reaches a level of stability that varies
depending on the environment. The equilibrium of the site,
although considered fragile, is usually relatively stable. If
the site’s equilibrium is disrupted, either by a change in the
site’s natural environment (storm, diverging currents, radical
temperature changes, ice) or by direct human intervention, a
new cycle of rapid deterioration may occur, and part or all of
the remains may be lost.
We often hear the argument emphasizing the vulnerability
of underwater sites because they are located in a humid
environment that is too often described as hostile. When
there is a signiicant change in an underwater site’s state
of equilibrium, the usual reaction is to hurry to remove the
objects that are threatened. Sound management of underwater
heritage and, as in the case cited as an example, public funds
force us to avoid acting hastily through a knee-jerk reaction
to immediately remove objects from their environment. It
is possible, even recommended, to wait as long as possible
before deciding to go ahead with the excavation. Obviously
there are some extreme situations that require immediate
action, but experience has shown that it is a good idea to take
the time available to adopt in situ preservation as the preferred
irst option as recommended in the UNESCO Convention on
the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage. The case of
the Baie-Trinité shipwreck is an excellent example of this.
The few months of winter that sealed the Baie-Trinité site under
a sheet of ice gave the various stakeholders an opportunity to
develop a strategy for an operation in spring 1995. At this
time, everything indicated that the ship was from the leet of
Sir William Phips, who attacked the capital of New France,
Quebec City, in 1690. After his failed attack on the city, Phips
had to resign himself to returning to Boston. On the return
voyage, four of his 32 ships were wrecked and dozens of his
militiamen perished. There was no question about the site’s
potential signiicance, as Phips’ siege was a pivotal event in
the history of New France and North America.
Figure 2: The wreck of the
Elizabeth and Mary, at
Baie-Trinité in Québec, at
the moment of its discovery
in January 1995
(Marc-André Bernier)
To Dig or not to Dig?
Despite the obvious signiicance of the site, both in terms
of historical and popular importance and the research
opportunities it afforded, the Quebec Ministère de la
Culture et des Communications [Department of Culture
and Communications] and Parks Canada’s Underwater
Archaeology Service used a non-intrusive approach to
preserve the site in situ. A non-intrusive approach means
limiting the impact on the site as much as possible, without
disturbing structures that are still intact. In other words, no
excavations. There were a number of reasons for using this
approach in our example.
First, we had to conirm the feasibility of protecting the site in
situ. Since the ideal solution would be to protect the remains in
situ, it was important to understand the site and its environment
in order to determine to what extent we could mitigate the
new dynamics acting on the shipwreck. To do this, minimal
recording of the site was necessary to understand its scope and
the nature of its components. In addition to learning about the
remains, there was a need to gather as much data as possible
about the site’s environmental conditions: temperature,
variations in depth, currents, salt content of the water, etc. An
attempt to rebury the wreckage was even planned at the end
of the operation in order to determine whether it was possible
to provide in situ protection.
Another objective was to gather as much information as
possible in order to corroborate the identiication of a ship
from Phips’ leet. Although everything pointed in that
direction, this hypothesis was not conirmed. There was
a second practical application to the site recording since it
provided a basis for this data collection.
Third, although the primary objective was in situ preservation,
it was important to gather information that would be useful
for future excavations. Should it prove impossible to stabilize
the site, emergency excavation would be initiated. Any
information to help plan and optimize the archaeological
To Dig or not to Dig?
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The information gathered during the non intrusive work
and the inspection visits made it possible to conclude with
certainty that the site was unlikely to be covered by ice again
and provided assurance that no parts of the shipwreck were in
danger. Some of the tarps had moved during the fall storms,
and a new section of the site had been exposed. During this
time, the collected data was used to conirm that this was
indeed a ship from Phips’ leet.
Figure 3: Emergency archaeological excavations, with the aid of
squaring; the digs occurred over two season, in 1996 and in 1997
(Marc-André Bernier)
excavation work then became critical: extent of the site, types
of artefacts, potential need of conservation, soundness of the
ship’s wooden structure, etc.
A three week operation with these three objectives was
launched as soon as spring arrived, with an additional
mandate to involve the community in order to encourage
its members to take responsibility for the shipwreck’s
protection. Around twenty local sport divers received basic
training in the Introduction to Marine Archaeology course
by the Nautical Archaeology Society (NAS), a course
endorsed internationally by the International Committee on
the Underwater Cultural Heritage (ICUCH). Working under
the supervision of a certiied marine archaeologist, they
took turns gathering data underwater. These divers, whose
activities have in the past occasionally had a negative impact
on shipwrecks due to a lack of awareness of the importance
of protecting shipwrecks, have now become major players
and advocates in the quest to protect underwater heritage.
At the end of the project, a map of the visible remains was
produced, the diagnostic data about the various artefacts
was compiled, and a rough evaluation of the scope of the
buried remains was conducted. An effort was then made to
stabilize the site. First, the divers brought up unburied objects
considered to be very vulnerable, after having documented
their origins in detail. The divers then carefully re-covered
the site with geotextiles and sandbags.
In concert with this reburial, a regular site inspection program
was developed to monitor the conditions of the site mound in
order to be able to act immediately if necessary. Having a
group of trained local divers paid off in a number of ways.
Without these divers, visits to the site would have been much
fewer and farther between. On one occasion, when a new part
of the site was exposed by another storm, the divers were
able to salvage a porringer with a crest on it, which was a
key in positively identifying the shipwreck as one of the
ships from Phips’ leet. At this point, we should emphasize
the importance of not stripping shipwrecks of their artefacts,
even if they may seem void of information. A single object
can be the missing piece in the puzzle of a shipwreck.
In view of these indings, the decision to be made by the
authorities responsible for managing the site was easy.
Although there did not appear to be resources available for
an emergency excavation, the decision to do everything
possible to salvage these remains was inevitable. It had been
proven that this shipwreck was unique and priceless in terms
of historical and archaeological value, and the attempt to
preserve the site in situ had shown that this was not an option.
Emergency excavations would have to be carried out.
Over the next two summers, a team of professionals and
volunteers carried out archaeological excavations (Fig.
5), which uncovered one of the most interesting sites from
the New France era. We now know that the ship was the
Elizabeth and Mary, a 45 tun merchant vessel built in New
England carrying some 50 men, all of whom came from the
small town of Dorchester near Boston. But we inally know
for certain that the details of their story would have been lost
if the site had not been excavated.
Conclusion
The Baie-Trinité approach to delay emergency excavations
for as long as possible was certainly not the only option, and
clearly there would have been ample justiication for initiating
these emergency excavations the irst year. However, the
selected approach is consistent with a broader policy that
favours in situ preservation as a irst option whenever
possible. This approach was therefore not exceptional, but
rather part of an organizational philosophy and, accordingly,
it had to be applied this way to ensure consistency in the
entire action plan to prevent the process from being derailed.
The same approach was recently used in 2004/2005 in the
discovery of a fourth 16th-century Basque whaling ship
in Red Bay, Labrador. This shipwreck is one of three very
rare underwater sites from this century in North America,
and its state of preservation is only comparable to the other
Basque shipwrecks found in the incredible archaeological
ield of Red Bay. This time, the non-intrusive assessment
conducted by Parks Canada established that the site could
be protected in situ, which is what was done. This did not,
however, exclude the collection of scientiic data using some
test excavations that only had a small impact on a very small
percentage of the entire site. These types of decisions may
seem dificult for heritage managers, but a consistent and
systematic approach guided by professional principles and
clear ethics may make the decisions easier, if not obvious.
An underwater archaeological excavation uses considerable
resources, so we must be well informed if we want to invest
these resources in the right place.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Japanese Midget Sub at Pearl Harbor:
Collaborative Maritime Heritage Preservation
Hans Van Tilburg
Regional Maritime Heritage Coordinator
Paciic Islands Ofice NOAA NMSP
USA
The views expressed in this article are the personal opinions of
the author and do not necessarily represent the oficial positions
of the US government, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration — NOAA, or the Department of Commerce
History
On December 7th, 1941, the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor
immediately involved the United States in the war against
Japan in the Paciic. This was a watershed moment and today
it would be dificult to overestimate the importance of this
single event on local, regional, national and international
history. Some may not realize, though, that in addition to
naval aviation, the operation included the deployment by the
Japanese Imperial Navy of ive two-man midget submarines,
known in code as ko-hyoteki or “A-targets.” These advanced
secret weapons, developed in the 1930’s, were to make their
way into Pearl Harbor and launch their torpedoes. One of
the ive submarines in this special attack unit inadvertently
initiated armed response from the US forces more than an
hour before the arrival of the Japanese aircraft squadrons. A
small submarine was spotted outside the harbor attempting to
enter the channel behind an incoming tug and barge. At 6:40
AM a PBY lying boat on morning patrol and the World War
I-era destroyer USS Ward commenced the attack. One shot
from the Ward’s #3 gun appeared to strike the conning tower
of the sub, which then submerged amidst exploding depth
charges, not to be seen again. Though this contact failed to
suficiently alarm those in command at the time, this was the
irst combat action of the events of that fateful day, the irst
shot of the war in the Paciic.
The Site
The air attack inlicted a tremendous amount of damage, but
had a submarine really been sunk before the bombing started?
The search to conirm the reported contact began in the early
1980s with a collaborative National Park Service/US Navy
operation called Seamark. Throughout the last two decades
of the 20th-century there followed a number of subsequent
attempts by a variety of projects to locate the site in the deep
water area outside the entrance to Pearl Harbor. It was not
until 2002, though, that the Hawaii Undersea Research Lab
(or HURL, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration’s National Undersea Research Center at the
University of Hawaii) inally came across the 24 meter long
midget sub, sitting intact and upright on the sea loor in over
400 meters of water, a 10 centimeter shell hole at the starboard
base of the conning tower corresponding to the USS Ward’s
action report. The site is of considerable historic signiicance,
and also a war grave due appropriate treatment and respect.
Japanese Midget Sub at Pearl Harbor
It is one of a very few physical artifacts from the momentous
attack still in its original context. But what actions are needed
to preserve the site? What are the threats?
Evolving Site Management
In September of 2002 the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), HURL, and the National Park
Service (NPS) met to deine goals and begin the formulation
of a project design. Clearly this heritage resource deserved
proper preservation management, but how and by whom?
Immediate threats to the site were identiied: dumping of
waste or disposal of dredged material, entanglement from
ishing activities, looting and salvage, potential explosion
of munitions, and damage from anchoring. The natural
environment posed preservation threats as well in terms
of both corrosion and sealoor instability. Currents on the
bottom had scoured sediments from beneath both the bow and
stern, setting the sub’s 46 ton displacement irmly amidships
on harder substrate.
NOAA and the NPS agreed to work closely together and
with HURL and the University of Hawaii in the pursuit of
long term preservation management. NOAA’s programs
(National Marine Sanctuary Program and its Maritime
Heritage Program, Ofice of Ocean Exploration) have the
capacity for deep sea research and heritage management, and
the NPS’ Submerged Resources Center has long experience
in maritime archaeology and steel warship preservation (Pearl
Harbor and USS Arizona). Importantly, both management
agencies agreed on a precautionary approach, seeking to
gather appropriate data with minimal interference to the site
for achieving long term preservation goals, in accordance
with the National Historic Preservation Act, the National
Environmental Policy Act and other applicable laws and
policies. UNESCO’s Convention on Underwater Cultural
Heritage annex rule #1 in situ preservation (and Rule #3
as well as others), along with established protocol for war
grave sites, guided the creation of the project design from
the very beginning. Both the US Naval Historical Center
(Underwater Archaeology Branch) and the Navy’s Ofice of
Naval Research have also become involved as active partners
in the joint preservation project.
Science Mission:
To gather appropriate data for long term preservation
and site management.
Preservation Mission:
To protect and preserve the Japanese midget sub site as a
signiicant maritime heritage resource and war grave for
the beneit of present and future generations.
The project design received critical attention, but who
ultimately had jurisdiction over the site? Soon after the
discovery, contacts were made with both the US Department
Japanese Midget Sub at Pearl Harbor
Figure 1: Portside of midget sub and HURL research submersible Pisces V (image HURL 2002)
Figure 2: Torpedoes at bow and current scour beneath the forward section (image HURL 2002)
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Japanese Midget Sub at Pearl Harbor
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Force Base, has been developing a low impact model for the
measurement of steel hull corrosion rates. The Japanese sub
offers an excellent opportunity to test this model in a deep
water environment. Preliminary results suggest a corrosion
rate of 0.5 mil per year, equivalent to a metal thickness loss
of 0.9mm over a 60 year period (original hull material 8mm
cold rolled MS44 steel plate). It must be emphasized that
these data are approximations, and the corrosion investigation
represents ongoing work.
Figure 3: Sakamaki’s midget sub HA-19 ashore on Oahu, December
8th, 1941 (official U.S. Navy photograph)
of State and the Government of Japan. On February 12th,
2004, the Government of Japan and the US exchanged
diplomatic notes agreeing that: the US owned and controlled
the midget sub; the site should be respected as a war grave
as well as an historic resource; it should be protected and
managed in accordance with international law, US historic
preservation laws, and the US Policy for the protection of
Sunken Warships (January 19th, 2001); and that under the
maritime law of salvage the US, as the owner, is exercising its
right to preserve its property where it has been discovered, and
provides notice that it should not be salvaged or disturbed in
any manner without the express authorization of the owner.
Current Status
Research missions to the site have been conducted
opportunistically from 2002-2005. (HURL conducts preseason check-out dives in the vicinity.) These dives focused
on retrieving environmental parameters (salinity, dissolved
oxygen, pH, temperature etc.), video survey footage, limited
sediment and corrosion samples, and measurements of
corrosion potential (Ecorr) at selected positions along the
hull. The midget sub rests on the sealoor with a slight list
to port. An even layer of concretion including rusticles
covers the exposed areas of the hull. Both Type-97 (mini)
torpedoes are loaded in the forward tubes. The shell hole
on the conning tower is the only visible entry point on the
submarine, and there is no evidence of explosion or major
depth charge damage. A limited interior visual survey (via
the shell hole) revealed considerable sedimentation, as well
as marine life (sponges and crab). Marine life growing on
the underside of the sub suggests that the current scouring
at the bow and stern is not a new process, but may relect a
relatively stable sealoor proile.
The NPS’ Submerged Resources Center, in partnership with
researchers at Michigan State University, University of
Nebraska-Lincoln, University of New Mexico, and Eglin Air
There are still a number of issues to be resolved regarding
this site. Which of the ive subs is this? (Only one, Kazuo
Sakamaki’s HA-19 now on display at the Museum of the
Paciic War in Fredericksburg, Texas, has been positively
identiied.) What are the oxygen and pH levels in the
interior? What are the stresses on structural integrity, and how
dynamic are the sea loor processes scouring the supporting
sediments beneath the sub? As a heritage resource, how can
the site be “accessed” by the public, and what is the best
venue for sharing information from such deep water wreck
sites? The site’s association with the Pearl Harbor National
Historic Landmark warrants its inclusion and nomination to
the National Register. NOAA and NPS are addressing these
speciic maritime heritage issues in the Paciic.
On the management side, what type of protection is most suited
for this site? Since the sub’s discovery, the Sunken Military
Craft Act now helps to deine management of naval vessels,
but this leads to an interesting situation. The Japanese midget
sub is no longer a foreign military vessel, nor is it a US warship,
but it is property owned by the United States. NOAA, NPS
and the US Navy, along with the US Department of Justice
and the State Department, are currently working together to
better deine these management and site protection issues.
The Japanese midget sub preservation project continues to
be a work of collaboration commemorating one of the major
events of the 20th-century.
Information Sources
http://sanctuaries.noaa.gov/maritime/expeditions/midget_sub.html
http://www.soest.hawaii.edu/HURL/midget.html
http://www.history.navy.mil/photos/sh-fornv/japan/japtp-ss/mdg-a2.htm
http://www.nps.gov/applications/submerged/
Burlingame, Burl. Advance Force: Pearl Harbor. Annapolis: Naval
Institute Press, 1992.
Kemp, Paul. Midget Submarines of the Second World War. London:
Chatham Publishing, 1999.
Lenihan, Daniel (editor). “Submerged Cultural Resources Study:
USS Arizona Memorial and Pearl Harbor National Historic
Landmark.” Santa Fe: NPS Submerged Cultural Resources Unit,
1989.
Wiltshire, John and Terry Kerby and Algis Kalvaitis. “The Search,
Discovery, and Survey of a World War II Japanese Type “A” Midget
Submarine,” Oceanography vol.15 no.4 (2002): 35-40.
0
In Situ Protection in the Netherlands
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The In Situ Protection of a 17th-Century
Trading Vessel in the Netherlands
M. R. Manders
Maritime Heritage Oficer
Rijksdienst voor het Oudheidkundig Bodemonderzoek
(ROB; National Service for Archaeological Heritage)
The Netherlands
Introduction
The in situ protection of archaeological objects has become an
important issue over the years, above, as well as underwater.
The reason for protecting underwater sites is partly the large
amount of archaeologically interesting shipwrecks and partly
because of the growing notion of protecting a representative
part of our maritime heritage for future generations. Article
1 of the ICOMOS-charter of 1996 as well as Article 1 of the
UNESCO Convention on the Protection of Maritime Heritage
of 2001 put emphasis on the fact that protection in situ should
be the irst option.
But if this is going to be the standard procedure, what does
it mean? When can or do we want to protect shipwrecks
underwater? From what are we protecting them? For how
long can we protect a shipwreck? These are the questions that
we have to answer ourselves.
The Netherlands have a relatively long tradition of in situ
preservation of maritime archaeological sites. It started
with some shipwrecks found within reclaimed land on the
former Zuiderzee-bed in the Flevopolders in the 1980s. Here,
more than 30 wrecks are protected against the lowering of
the groundwater table. In 1988 the BZN 3 wreck, a ship of
the East India Company (VOC) located in the Wadden Sea,
was the irst wreck under water to be physically protected as
well as protected by law. This in situ protection consisted of
covering the site with 6000 sandbags and polypropylene nets.
Throughout the years this method has been simpliied and
now only the nets remain.
The Netherlands Institute for Ship and UnderwaterArchaeology
(NISA) and the National Service for Archaeological Heritage
(ROB) have been involved in several EU-projects, focussing
on the degradation and the protection of archaeological
and historical heritage in situ. Information about what is
threatening our heritage was collected in a systematic way.
The protection methods in use were evaluated and new
solutions were developed. In one of these projects, the MoSS
project, the currently used method has been evaluated. This
evaluation took place on the Burgzand Noord 10 wreck (BZN
10 Wreck).
The In Situ Protection of the BZN 10-wreck
The BZN 10 wreck is that of a 17th-century merchant ship
loaded with a cargo of Spanish (so-called) olive jars, wellpreserved oak casks with grapes and small ish and pine wood
boxes with schist slates in different shapes. It was found in an
area in the Wadden Sea that is known as the Texel Roads. Here
ships were protected from the dominant winds coming from
the West and Northwest while they were waiting to be loaded
or unloaded or waiting to sail out. The amount of shipwrecks
found in this area illustrates that it was not always that safe.
Many of these shipwrecks are still in an excellent condition.
This can be explained by the fact that when ships wrecked in
this area, they quickly disappeared into the soft seabed and
were covered up by the sediment that created an anaerobic
environment where even organic objects are preserved very
well. There is however a threat to them!
The BZN 10 wreck lies within a tidal range of 6 to 9 meters.
The Wadden Sea is an unstable environment by nature.
Due to ever-changing sandbanks and gullies, sites that are
protected by a thick layer of sand can be exposed within a
few centuries, decades or even a few years. Then wrecks
are liable to abrasion and scouring. The Burgzand area in
particular is eroding very heavily. The “Afsluitdijk,” a 30
km long dike closing off the former Zuyder Sea that was
built between 1927 and 1932 is the cause of this. This large
structure prevents the water coming from the North Sea to
low into the former Suyder Sea. The water now has to ind
another way. This causes erosion of the seabed. It is estimated
that in the following decennia the seabed will lower at least
two meters more. If no action is taken, many shipwrecks in
this area will be completely lost.
When a wreck is sticking out of the seabed, it is liable to
many degrading processes. Besides abrasion and scouring,
one of the biggest threats is attack by woodborers like the
Teredo navalis. This shipworm can destroy wood within a
few months, leaving nothing but hollowed-out planks and
frames that can easily be destroyed by the currents.
Another big threat is the ishing industry. The Wadden Sea
is extensively used as a ishing ground. Wreck parts that are
sticking out of the seabed are caught in nets and break off.
A Legal Protection
If a wreck site is older than 50 years, of historical or
archaeological signiicance and lying in Dutch National
waters, then the Dutch Monument Law of 1988 protects
it. This means that there is an obligation to report and that
excavation can only be carried out with a licence. Besides
that, the Dutch government committed itself politically to
the operational rules of the Underwater Cultural Heritage
(Annex to the UNESCO Convention on the Protection of the
Underwater Cultural Heritage, Paris 2001).
The Burgzand Area, in which the BZN 10 wreck is found, is
part of the Wadden Sea. This area is listed on the Tentative List
for the World Heritage Convention. When this area becomes a
World Heritage Site, its value for common maritime heritage
will be even better ensured.
This legal protection is important, but will there be something
left to protect if mechanical and biological deterioration
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Figure 1: Site plan of the BZN
10 wreck. Only structure and
objects above the seabed are
mapped during a non-intrusive
assessment
(Drawing M. Manders)
Figure 2: Fresh pine and oak woodblocks
are hanging freely in the water within an
open weave net. These samples help us to
understand which processes are responsible
for the deterioration of shipwrecks that are
lying uncovered on the seabed (R. Obst)
Figure 3: The method of physical
protection used on several sites
in the Wadden Sea. Sand that is
moved over the seabed by the
currents penetrates the holes of
the net and settles on the site.
Within a few weeks, the whole site
is covered again with a thick layer
of sediment
(Drawing M. Manders/M. Kosian)
In Situ Protection in the Netherlands 1
In Situ Protection in the Netherlands
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
the site. The multibeam images show us that the protection
with nets works very well. It catches and keeps the sediment
on the site while outside of the protected area the erosion of the
seabed goes on. For the coming years, the 4000 square metres
of protection will be enough. However, eventually there will
be an end to this protection. At that time there will be a need
for an excavation plan, people and money to safeguard the
valuable archaeological information of the site.
Conclusion
Figure 4: A Spanish olive jar with basket, within a few hours the
basket disappeared due to the strong currents on the site (NISA)
processes is rapid? The protection of a site should be
a combination of a legal and, if necessary, a physical
protection.
A Physical Protection
The BZN 10 wreck has been physically protected to ensure
its value for maritime history for the coming years. The
whole site (and more), approximately 4,000 square metres, is
covered with polypropylene nets (50% density). These nets
are placed loosely on the wreck site to capture the sand that
is moved across the seabed by the tidal currents to create an
artiicial mount in which the wreck is kept in an anaerobic
environment. This mount stops abrasion, scouring and attack
by woodborers. Because the mount is sloping, ishing nets do
not get caught on parts of the wreck.
Monitoring the Site and the Area
The whole site is protected physically and legally. Since
2002 the area has also been extensively monitored on the
effects of this in situ protection. Firstly, a data logger has
been installed to monitor changes in the environment of the
wreck (temperature, dissolved oxygen, conductivity, salinity,
Redox-potential in the sediment, pH, sedimentation, depth
and turbidity). Also, samples of pine and oak wood have been
placed on the site in aerobic as well as anaerobic conditions
to measure the rate and speed of deterioration of wood on the
site. The aerobic condition can be compared with a shipwreck
that is lying exposed on the seabed, while the anaerobic
condition stands for a shipwreck that is buried under a layer
of sediment. In fact, these samples were also covered with
polypropylene nets to make the results comparable with the
protected wrecksite. The effects of the physical protection are
monitored every year with multi-beam sonar. This method,
mapping the sealoor using sound waves to measure the
depth, has proved to be very effective in getting an overview
of sedimentation and of the erosion processes on and around
The Netherlands has a long tradition of in situ preservation of
maritime objects; since the early 1980s detected shipwrecks
on reclaimed land are protected against the lowering of the
groundwater table. In 1988 the irst wreck under water was
physically protected against looting and erosion processes.
Now, almost twenty years later, our knowledge has improved,
and in situ protection has become almost standard procedure.
The procedures and techniques we use are evaluated through
research, some of it imbedded in large international projects
like MoSS and Bacpoles. It shows that we are on the right
track. Our protection method, using polypropylene nets,
proves to be very successful, as well as our monitoring
strategy using multibeam sonar. These two tools give us the
possibility to manage our heritage in an effective way.
Further Reading
Brenk, Seger van den; “Innovative Research at the BZN 10 wreck
site. MoSS Newsletter” 4/2003; 19-21.
Eenkhoorn, W., J. de Jong and A. Wevers; Beschermen van
scheepsresten in de polders. “De Houtwereld”, 1980 (33) 17, 1925.
Maarleveld, Th.J., Texel - Burgzand III : een scheepswrak met
bewapening. In: W.A. van Es,H. Sarfatij en P.J. Woltering;
Archeologie in Nederland. De rijkdom van het
bodemarchief. Amsterdam, Amersfoort (1988). 189-191.
Maarleveld, Thijs; The Wadden Sea and heritage protection in The
Netherlands. MoSS Newsletter 4/2003; 13-15.
Manders, Martijn; “The BZN 10-wreck, threatened by nature?, in:
Jeremy Green and Myra Stanbury (eds.),” Bulletin of the Australasian
Institute for Maritime Archaeology (2002a), 26: 99-104.
Manders, Drs. M.; Standaardrapport inventarisatie scheepswrak
BZN 10, Internal report NISA, Lelystad (2002b).
Manders, Martijn; “Safeguarding: The physical protection of
underwater sites.” MoSS Newsletter 4/2003; 17-19.
Manders, Martijn R., ‘Protecting Common Maritime Heritage. The
Netherlands involved in two EU-projects: MoSS and BACPOLES’,
in: Fabio Maniscalco (ed.), Mediterraneum Vol.4. Protection and
Appraisal of Underwater Cultural Heritages, 2004, p. 279-292.
Oosting, R.; Scheepsarcheologie en Monumentenzorg in Flevoland.
Monumenten 3/4 (1990), 26-29.
Vos, Arent; “The Burgzand-project and MoSS.” MoSS Newsletter
4/2003; 4-6.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Orio IV: The Archaeological Investigation of
an Ore Carrier (patache venaquero) from the 16th - Century
Manuel Izaguirre
Center for Underwater Investigations INSUB
Palacio del Almirante Okendo
Spain
Gipuzkoa is a Historic Territory of the Basque Country and
the Oria is its longest and largest river. Its source lies in the
eastern part of Gipuzkoa bordering on Navarra which in
turn is the divide between the Cantabrian and Mediterranean
slopes; it ends at the ishing port of Orio.
Orio IV
therefore not endangered by the works, it was considered
preferable to preserve it in situ.
A year after the excavation of the Orio II, during the periodic
monitoring carried out by the Society for Underwater
Investigation (INSUB) of the commercial sand dredging
project in the Oria river, a shipment of iron ingots dating
from between the mid 15th- to mid 16th-centuries was found,
probably manufactured in one of the area’s ironworks. In the
excavations that were carried out, no further ship remains
were found associated with this cargo.
This river was navigable up to the shipyards of Aginaga,
six km upstream from its mouth. Over time, a good number
of ironworks and shipyards were established along its path
and its tributaries, as the ships built on the estuary were able
to navigate it, and it allowed the inland transport of iron
ore, predominantly from Bizkaia, and the exportation of
manufactured iron to the most important ports of the coast.
Legislation
Throughout history, the biggest problem in navigating this
river has been the moving shallow sandbank at its mouth.
During storms it is practically insuperable, leading to a high
number of shipwrecks occurring even up to today.
In all three cases, in order for an archaeological intervention
to occur, the proposing entity must solicit authorization
from the Department of Culture of the Regional Council
of the historic area concerned on the basis of plans for the
archaeological project.
The Finds
During dredging of the estuary of the Oria in 1991, remains
of a wooden boat were found on the riverbed. Learning of
this ind through personal communication with the diver
working on the river clearing, it was clear that in order to
continue with the dredging, the discovered wreck would have
to be destroyed. In view of these circumstances, the author
developed an emergency excavation and recovery project
with the inancial support and authorization of the Regional
Council of Gipuzkoa for this ind, which was named the
Orio I.
The emergency excavations were carried out simultaneously
to the dredging, as the dredging company refused to halt
their work during the archaeological interventions, for purely
economic reasons. This meant that the dredger continued its
work from the surface whilst the archaeologists investigated
the riverbed below without maintaining any safety buffer
zone between the two activities.
During the excavation, a second wreck named the Orio II,
dating from the beginnings of the 16th-century, was located.
It too was at great risk of destruction by the dredging, and
therefore its investigation and recovery also became necessary
before further dredging took place.
As a result, the following year, the Orio II was excavated
under identical circumstances, which is to say by the same
team of archaeologists, with the authorisation and backing
of the Regional council and simultaneous to the dredging of
the river. During this excavation, the presence of yet another
wreck was noted, the Orio IV. However, as it was located
outside the dredging perimeter and its physical integrity was
According to the Basque Cultural Heritage Law,
archaeological remains can be protected under three different
legal regimes: declared sites, inventoried sites, and areas of
potential archaeological interest.
The estuary of the Oria, where the above-mentioned works
were carried out, does not beneit from legal protection in
matters of archaeology, despite the fact that ive wrecks have
been discovered there since 1992 and that it constitutes a
historically important navigable route.
Impact and Archaeology
In 2000, the Basque Government’s Department of Public
Works and Transportation, promoter of the dredging works,
drew up a project for the construction of a ishing port on the
left bank of the Oria. Due to the absence of archaeological
protection, an archaeological survey was not included in
the project. The Regional Council of Gipuzkoa, aware both
Figure 1: View of the point where the metallic bulkhead of the
pier cuts the structure of the boat without damaging the rest of the
architecture
Orio IV
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
surface, together with the remains of the wreck’s structure,
for transport to the desalination reservoir. For this purpose,
the 18th-century luvial reservoir of the Agorregi ironworks
was used, today restored and in activity, situated some eight
km away. This location is possibly the same ironworks to
which the minerals were destined in the 16th-century before
the boat capsized.
It has to be emphasised that the area excavated corresponds
approximately to only two-thirds of the entire site, since the
rest was cut vertically by the exterior metal bulkhead of the
new pier construction under which the remaining one-third
of the boat remains.
Figure 2: Given that the stern is located closer to the center of
the river, it was more exposed to fluvial abrasion than the rest of
the wreck and consequently was further damaged; the stern was,
however, significant enough to be able to clarify the typology and
chronology of the wreck
of the scope of the proposed works and of the underwater
archaeological record in the area, alerted the promoting
department of the Basque Government with regards to the
necessity of developing an archaeological component.
It was estimated that the archaeological impact created by
the proposed works would include the total destruction of the
Orio IV wreck discovered in 1992. The archaeological project
drawn up by the author proposed the investigation of the site,
its complete salvage and its subsequent conservation. In this
respect, it is worth noting that the philosophy followed by the
author in all archaeological projects he has so far proposed
is the preservation of wrecks in situ and to proceed to their
excavation only to avoid the destruction of the archaeological
remains, or when it is the only means available to uncover a
signiicant body of knowledge.
After ten days of survey work through dredging, with no signs
of the wreck, the company considered the locating efforts
over and thus the archaeological investigation was closed.
However, once all of the infrastructure works for the port were
complete and eight months after the archaeological survey
had been terminated, the excavating equipment brought up
the irst pieces of the wreck, twenty meters beyond the limits
of the previous survey area.
From this moment on, the archaeological excavation
was initiated as previously projected, this time with no
interferences by other works.
Sequence of the Work
Once the archaeological excavation begun and during
the irst three days, work focused on the removal of extra
material foreign to the wreck. As and when the irst pieces of
the naval architecture emerged from the sandy riverbed, they
were labelled to anticipate any possible displacement by the
water currents.
The entire interior of the boat was covered with iron ore
deposits. These were bagged in m3 sacs and raised to the
As with previous wrecks, during the inal stages of the
construction of the pier, the same excavation equipment
brought up the remains of a new wreck, named the Orio V,
composed mainly of bar stocks and other basic derivatives
of iron ingots, giving an indication of the archaeological
potential of the area. This new wreck lies intact on the
riverbed and the Basque Government refuses to initiate any
archaeological investigation prior to the continuing dredging
of the river. Once again, their preservation will depend on a
private initiative.
Description of the Wreck
The fundamental characteristics of the Orio IV are similar
to the other two boats found in 1992 in the same estuary,
representing Renaissance ore carriers.
Orio IV was a coastal transport employed in the transportation
of ore along the coast. Its maximum length from the sternpost
to the actual exterior bulkhead of the newly constructed pier
– that is to say the boat’s visible area – is 7.40 m. Its maximum
existing width, which corresponds to the area closest to the
bulkhead, is approximately 5m.
It is a wooden boat constructed using a loor-futtocks system,
with a hull strakes 3 cm thick and an interior lining using
loose ceiling planks of oak that cover a space slightly larger
than the space covered by the morticed frames.
The keel is sculpted such that in section, it exhibits a Tshaped cross section amidships, tending to a V-shape towards
either extremity. This makes for a better attachment of the
respective garboard strakes.
The only mast step that has survived is represented by a
mortice cut into the keelson amidships. In the same area
there was once a mast of which we have no trace. This does
not mean that the boat could not have had another mast set
on a possible loating mast step, of which we have no trace
either.
The stern is lat and its sternpost is joined to the keel with
two iron bolts.
The vessel’s cargo consists of iron ore, mainly goethite,
with a purity of 75%, while the rest is limonite and other
minerals. The estimated load of ore, taking into consideration
the quantity extracted from the ship and its surroundings,
and setting aside the quantity that theoretically must remain
Orio IV
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
buried under the pier, can be calculated as between 30,000
and 33,000 kg, which is between 600 and 660 hundredweights.
This tonnage is within the maximum carrying load typical
for this type of ore carrier in the port of Muskiz, which is
hypothetically the point of origin of the ore.
Movable Archaeological Material
Among the few remains found in the wreck, it is worth
emphasizing:
•
•
•
•
•
Ceramic shards from three different ceramic vessels.
One of the types is glazed green, possibly from
Saintonge, France. Another type corresponds to the
clear ceramic with caramel glaze, and the third group
of fragments belongs to a piece of earthenware, also of
foreign origin
Two fragments of the same rope
Pine tar pitch in mass
Caulking between strakes with vegetable remains,
possibly hemp
Leather footwear: This has been investigated in the
laboratories of Parks Canada by Stephen Davis. A
clear relationship has been found to the shoe from the
excavations of Red Bay, dated to 1560 and 1570
References to the San Juan
The union between loor and futtock by means of a
mortice-and-tenon dovetail joint
• The outermost ceiling plank on either side being notched
out to receive iller planks set between neighbouring
frames, the purpose of which was to discourage water
and debris from entering the bilge
•
A sculpted keel of varying cross sections
The data that can be provided by the Orio IV make it a
precious scientiic complement for the investigations into
16th-century Basque naval architecture being carried out in
Canada, as the naval typology of the ships found in the Orio
does not exist in Canada. Moreover, the scant equipment found
in these boats provides valuable comparative archaeological
material for the Canadian investigation, as for example the
footwear mentioned above, so far the only example found in
the Basque Country.
•
Conclusion
This paper addresses the emergency safeguarding actions
and investigations that took place, with both physical
and administrative dificulty, of several wrecks from the
16th-century affected by works instigated by the Basque
Government in a river area lacking legal protection for
archaeological remains, in spite of its history and tradition
as one of the most navigable luvial ways of the Historic
Territory of Gipuzkoa.
Regarding the architecture of the boat, we can point towards
very interesting analogies to the Basque whaleboat San Juan,
sunk in 1565 and investigated and excavated by Parks Canada
in Red Bay, Labrador, Canada, as well as to the three other
large whaling vessels found in the same bay since 1980. The
two fundamental reasons for this relationship are:
It represents the long voyage of a ship, which in 1530
transported a load of ore to be transformed into iron by the
ironworks in this area of the Basque Country, to be then
exported around the world. However, a mishap interrupted
its journey close to the inal destination and since then the
ship has remained hidden like a mute witness to history.
These are both vessels built in the Basque Country at around
the same time. Although the lengths and uses of these ships are
different, the conceptual essence of design and the traditional
building method deine and base the different manifestations
of a unique vernacular architecture, such as:
Thanks to archaeological science its remains have been
brought back to life 475 years later. Its cargo, initially
consisting of ore, has now been considerably enriched with
all the precious information it has yielded, the product of
investigations carried out thanks to private initiative. The
ship’s short voyage that never came to an end has thus become
an ininite course around the world.
Figure 3: Sketch of the ship without the sheathing to
better view the arrangement of the structure and of the
hull of the boat; to the left one can see the wall of the
newly built port
HMS Swift
HMS Swift: Scientific Research and
Management of Underwater Cultural Heritage in Argentina
Dolores Elkin
Directora, Programa de Arqueología Subacuática (PROAS)
Instituto Nacional de Antropología
Argentina
History and Discovery of the HSM Swift
It was 6 pm on the 13th of March 1770 when the British sloop
of war HMS Swift, based at Port Egmont in the Malvinas/
Falkland islands, sank in the Deseado estuary, currently Santa
Cruz Province in southern Argentina.
The Swift had an overall length of 28 meters and a beam of
8 meters and was armed with fourteen six-pounder cannons
and twelve swivel guns. A few days earlier, under the
command of Captain George Farmer and with a crew of
nearly a hundred men, the Swift had left the British base with
the purpose of conducting geographical surveys in the region.
However, according to the historical documents, strong and
persistent winds drove the ship towards the continental shore.
The captain decided to enter the Deseado estuary, a natural
and well sheltered harbor which had been visited by sailors
and explorers since the 16th-century.
An unchartered rock hidden by the high tide caused the
stranding and the subsequent sinking of the ship. Except for
three unfortunate men, all the crew were able to reach the
shore. They survived in extremely precarious conditions,
subsisting by hunting and collecting local wildlife.
After some time they made a brave decision: six volunteers
and one oficer would row back to Port Egmont for help
in one of the Swift’s cutters. Unbelievably, they succeeded
in the enterprise, and one month after the loss of the Swift
they were rescued by HMS Favorite, another sloop of the
British squadron.
Figure 1: One of the display cases of the HMS Swift exhibit
at the Mario Brozoski Museum in Puerto Deseado
(Chris Underwood/Instituto Nacional de Antropología)
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
More than two centuries later the challenge of trying to
ind the remains of the Swift was faced by a group of high
school students from Puerto Deseado. They agreed that if the
shipwreck was ever found, all its contents would be kept in
the town as part of the local historical heritage.
These enterprising young men discovered the remains of
the Swift in 1982 in an extraordinary state of preservation.
A large proportion of the ship´s wooden structure was still in
place and the artefacts included a wide range of items made of
ceramic, porcelain, glass, wood, leather and other materials.
The site was soon declared historical heritage of the province
of Santa Cruz and a new museum was created in the town of
Puerto Deseado, named Mario Brozoski in honor of one of
the young divers who had found the site. Since then all the
artefacts recovered from the Swift are kept at this museum,
where part of the collection is always on display.
The Archaeological Research
The irst professional archaeological interventions on the
Swift site began in January 1998, when the underwater
archaeology team of the Argentinean National Institute of
Anthropology, under the direction of this author, became
responsible for the scientiic component of the Swift Project.
The Mario Brozoski museum would retain its role regarding
the conservation and management of the collection.
Several research themes are being addressed by our team.
One of them is the way in which the archaeological remains
relect the social hierarchies within the crew. For that reason
it was decided to begin the excavation at the stern of the site,
where the oficers´ cabins were located. Numerous pieces
of Chinese porcelain, as well as other high quality glass and
metal artefacts were found in this area. The team has yet to
excavate in an area more likely to be associated with the
lower ranks of the crew that may well reveal less prestigious
material.
Another topic under study is the diet on board the Swift. A
very interesting ind which sheds light on this subject is a
penguin egg, which indicates that the crew collected and
consumed local resources in order to augment the supplies
provided by the Royal Navy Victualling Board. Other foodrelated items found in the site include condiments such as
pepper and mustard seeds.
We are also addressing some research lines which require
the contribution of specialists in ship construction and marine
biology. In the irst case the main goal is to study the way
this ship was built, and some differences have already been
detected between the original plans of the ship dating from
1762 and the actual archaeological remains which lie on the
seabed. The most signiicant of these is the modiication of
the main deck and the addition of a third mast.
The purpose of the study of the site’s natural environment is
to understand and monitor the impact of factors such as water
HMS Swift
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
between the coastal state and the state of origin of the ship.
In 2001 the British Embassy in Argentina sponsored the
participation of a professional conservator from the Mary
Rose Trust in England in one of the ield seasons conducted
at the Swift, providing a signiicant input of expertise into
the treatment of waterlogged wooden artefacts. The British
Embassy also provided a grant which allowed the purchase
of chemical products and equipment for the conservation
laboratory in the Mario Brozoski Museum.
Figure 2: Several components of a wooden piece of furniture
recovered from the captain’s main cabin at the HMS Swift site
(D. Vainstub/Instituto Nacional de Antropología)
In 2003 the Nautical Archaeology Society, a UK based
organization, together with the Argentinean Embassy in
London jointly sponsored the participation of this author
in the NAS annual conference in Portsmouth, and in the
following year NAS Training organized and sponsored a ield
season at the Swift which included the participation of nine
English archaeology students and avocationals supervised by
a maritime archaeologist from NAS, who has subsequently
become a formal member of the archaeological research team
of the HMS Swift Project and the Underwater Archaeology
Programme of the Argentinean National Institute of
Anthropology.
Threats and Challenges
Being an archaeological site which is clearly protected by law
(both at a provincial and national level), the Swift is placed
in a favorable position, particularly in comparison to the
situation faced by most of the underwater cultural heritage
in South America, which is often subject to commercial
exploitation.
Figure 3: Wood fragment recovered from the Swift showing the
severe damage caused by the action of marine borers
(D. Vainstub/Instituto Nacional de Antropología)
currents, marine biological agents and sediments. Sadly,
there is clear evidence of the attack of marine wood borers
in many of the timbers which are part of the ship´s structure
and furniture.
Gradually the archaeological and interdisciplinary research
conducted at the Swift is contributing to our knowledge of
several aspects of this 18th-century vessel and its interaction
with its surrounding environment.
The Swift project has also provided opportunities for training
and exchange of expertise for students and professionals
from a number of countries. This is an important component
of the project and to date people from Argentina, Australia,
Canada, Chile, Colombia, England, France, Holland, Mexico,
United States of America and Uruguay have participated in
the various ield seasons conducted at the site since 1998.
Among these international experiences it is worth noting the
involvement of British institutions and nationals in the Swift
project illustrating one of the fundamental principles of the
UNESCO convention which is to encourage collaboration
Nonetheless, several issues pose threats to this site. One is the
constant development and growth of the nearby harbor, which
either directly or indirectly has a negative impact on the wreck
site. This is mainly due to the increasing construction work,
environmental contamination and heavy trafic, all of which
alter the delicate equilibrium of the Swift and its surrounding
environment.
Another limitation has to do with the conservation resources.
Although the project has a part time conservator employed by
the Mario Brozoski Museum, the enormous potential of this
site in terms of quality, quantity and diversity of archaeological
materials which are present exceeds the capacity of both
the human resources and the laboratory infrastructure. The
progress of the archaeological excavation must therefore
adjust to these limitations, and given the combination of the
harbor development and the fragile condition of the ship´s
timbers, we cannot help feeling that the clock is ticking.
Nevertheless, 2006 inds the Swift project and Argentinean
underwater archaeology in general in a quite promising
situation, with increasing legal, technical and inancial
resources assigned to them. The Argentinean National
Research Council (CONICET), the Secretariat of Culture and
the Municipal Government of Puerto Deseado are currently
sponsoring several aspects of the Swift project. Other
underwater archaeology projects are being sponsored by the
irst two institutions, and the current research being conducted
on the Dutch vessel Hoorn also involves the collaboration
with several institutions from the Netherlands.
HMS Swift
The Swift project exempliies many of the fundamental
principles and spirit of the UNESCO Convention on the
Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage. The project
has a number of clearly deined goals: scientiic research,
training, exchange of expertise at institutional and private
levels, as well the dissemination of information to the public
through the museum and publications. This integrated
approach has led to the Swift project becoming emblematic
throughout the region and internationally.
Further Reading
Bastida, R., D. Elkin, M. Grosso, M. Trassens and J. P. Martin.
2004. “The British sloop of war HMS Swift (1770): a case study of
the effects of biodeterioration on the underwater cultural heritage of
Patagonia.” Corrosion Reviews. Speciel Issue: Biodeterioration of
Cultural Heritage. Vol 22 (5-6):417-440. Freund Publishing House,
London (English version / Versión en inglés).
Dellino, V. and M. L. Endere. 2001. “The HMS Swift shipwreck:
The development of underwater heritage protection in Argentina.”
Conservation and Management of Archaeological Sites. Ed. B y N.
Stanley-Price, 4(4): 219-231. James & James, London.
Elkin, D. 2002. Water. “A new Field in Argentinian Archaeology.”
International Handbook of Underwater Archaeology, edited by
Carol V. Ruppé and Janet F. Barstad: 313-329. Kluwer Academic/
Plenum Publishers, New York
Elkin, D. 2003. “Arqueología marítima y patrimonio cultural
subacuático en Argentina. El trabajo actual desarrollado por el
Instituto Nacional de Antropología y Pensamiento Latinoamericano.”
Protección del Patrimonio Cultural Subacuático en América Latina
y el Caribe 26-33 UNESCO - Oicina regional de Cultura para
América Latina y el Caribe, La Habana.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Nº 19 (2000/2002): 665-666. Instituto Nacional de Antropología y
Pensamiento Latinoamericano, Secretaría de Cultura, Presidencia
de la Nación.
Elkin, D. 2000. “1995-2000: Cinco años de arqueología subacuática
en el INAPL.” Novedades de Antropología - Boletín Informativo de
Instituto Nacional de Antropología y Pensamiento Latinoamericano.
Secretaría de Cultura y Comunicación. Presidencia de la Nación.
Año 10, Nº 37: 17-20.
Elkin, D. 2004. “Bucear en la historia. Puerto Deseado y Península
Valdés.” En Patagonia. Año 1 Nº 2. Fundación Parques Nacionales.
Buenos Aires.
Elkin, D. and H. Cafferata. 2001. “Underwater archaeology and
cultural tourism – a mutual beneit proposal for Patagonia.” The
Bulletin of the Australasian Institute for Maritime Archaeology
(AIMA Bulletin), Vol. 25: 83-88.
Elkin, D. y V. Dellino. 1998. “Trabajando por el patrimonio cultural
subacuático.” 1° Congreso Virtual de Antropología y Arqueología.
www.naya.org.ar/congreso/ponencia3-4.htm (14 marzo 2001).
Elkin, D. y V. Dellino. 2001. “Underwater cultural heritage: The
case of Argentina.” The Bulletin of the Australasian Institute for
Maritime Archaeology (AIMA Bulletin)., Vol. 25: 89-96.
Elkin, D., D. Vainstub, A. Argüeso y V. Dellino. 2001. “Proyecto
Arqueológico HMS Swift. Sta. Cruz, Argentina.” Memorias
del Congreso Cientíico de Arqueología Subacuática ICOMOS
(XII Asamblea General de ICOMOS y Congreso Mundial de
Conservación y Patrimonio Monumental, México DF, Octubre
1999), P. L.. Erreguerena y R. Rofiel, coordinadoras: 143-162.
Colección Cientíica, Serie Arqueología, Instituto Nacional de
Antropología e Historia. México.
Elkin, D. 2003. “A British Wreck in Argentina – The HMS Swift.”
Nautical Archaeology (Newsletter) 2003-2004: 10.
Elkin, D., D Vainstub, A. Argueso y C. Murray. 2000. “H.M.S.
Swift: Arqueología submarina en Puerto Deseado. Desde el país de
los gigantes.” Perspectivas arqueológicas en Patagonia (Actas de las
IV Jornadas de Arqueología de la Patagonia, Río Gallegos, 2 al 6 de
noviembre de 1998), Volumen II: 659-671. Universidad Nacional de
la Patagonia Austral. Río Gallegos.
Elkin, D. 2003. “Investigación y conservación del patrimonio
cultural subacuático argentino.” Cuadernos del Instituto Nacional
de Antropología y Pensamiento Latinoamericano (sección Notas),
Murray, C., D. Elkin and D. Vainstub. 2002-2003. “The Sloop-ofWar HMS Swift: An archaeological approach.” The Age of Sail:
101-115, Conway Maritime Press, London.
The USS Monitor
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The USS Monitor:
In Situ Preservation and Recovery
John D. Broadwater
Program Manager
NOAA’s Maritime Heritage Program
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
USA
The views expressed in this article are the personal opinions of the
author and do not necessarily represent the oficial positions of the
US government, the US Department of Commerce, or the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).
On March 9, 1862 the ironclad warships USS Monitor and CSS
Virginia (ex-USS Merrimack) fought to a draw at Hampton
Roads, Virginia, in one of the most famous sea battles in the
history of the United States. The Monitor sank later that
year while being towed south along the Atlantic coast of
the United States. Monitor’s remains were not discovered
until 1973, lying in 230 ft. (71 m) of water off Cape Hatteras,
North Carolina. Two years later, the Monitor was designated
America’s irst National Marine Sanctuary, and is managed
by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) to prevent looting and unwanted salvage. In situ
preservation was the primary objective of the management
plan. Of course, certain artifacts were periodically recovered,
conserved and curated at a museum of public access out of
concern that they would be lost to strong currents or looters.
During the 1990s, however, NOAA determined that the
Monitor was ighting a losing battle against both natural
and human threats. As a result, NOAA aggressively applied
comprehensive planning strategies and ocean technology to
the problem of preserving the Monitor, resulting in a multiyear recovery project and a major museum exhibition.
History
At the time of its launching in 1862, the USS Monitor was
a radical departure from conventional wooden broadside
warships. The Monitor’s hull was heavily armor-plated and
almost completely submerged, presenting enemy gunners a
very small target. The only structures above the deck were
an armored, rotating gun turret amidships and a pilot house
near the bow. The gun turret could be revolved from within
to train its two 11-inch Dahlgren smoothbore guns in any
direction, independent of the ship’s heading.
The Monitor was launched on January 30, 1862, early in
the American Civil War, and ordered almost immediately
to battle. The Monitor arrived in Hampton Roads, Virginia,
on the evening of March 8, 1862. Earlier that day, the CSS
Virginia (ex-USS Merrimack) had made her maiden voyage
into Hampton Roads, sinking two Union warships and
running a third aground. Early on March 9, the Virginia
steamed back into Hampton Roads, prepared to inish off
the Union leet. The Monitor advanced to engage her iron
counterpart, thus commencing one of the most celebrated
Figure 1: The sinking of USS Monitor, 31 December 1862, as
depicted in Harper’s Weekly Magazine, January 1862
(NOAA Monitor Collection)
sea battles in history. The four-hour duel ended in a draw;
however, the repercussions were felt worldwide, hastening the
abandonment of conventional wooden broadside warships.
Although impervious to cannon ire, the Monitor succumbed
later that year to the power of the sea. While being towed
south along the Atlantic coast, the Monitor foundered in a
gale off Cape Hatters, North Carolina on New Years Eve,
with the loss of sixteen lives.
The Shipwreck
The Monitor’s remains were discovered in 1973 in an
expedition led by Duke University’s Marine Laboratory and
funded by the US Government National Science Foundation.
The wreck lies on a lat, featureless, sandy bottom in 230
ft. (71 m) of water, sixteen nautical miles SSE of Cape
Hatteras Lighthouse. The Monitor rolled over as it sank,
causing its turret to pull free and fall to the bottom, upside
down. The hull then settled onto the turret. The inverted hull
came to rest with the stern port quarter supported above the
bottom by the displaced turret. The lower hull had collapsed
forward of the midships bulkhead, and the stern armor belt
and associated structure was badly deteriorated. The position
of the turret under the port quarter elevated the stern and
port side, producing a list to starboard and creating severe
stresses on the hull. Only a small portion of the hull is buried,
leaving the rest exposed to strong currents, trawl nets and the
possibility of illegal salvage.
Lying near the conluence of the Labrador Current and Gulf
Stream, the Monitor is swept by strong, opposing currents that
frequently generate sudden and severe storms. The adverse
weather conditions, strong currents and deep water hamper
research by divers and remotely-operated instrumentation.
0 The USS Monitor
Protection, Research, and Management
Almost immediately after the Monitor’s discovery was
announced, historic preservation managers began earnestly
seeking some mechanism for protecting the remains from
scavenging or salvage. Because the Monitor lay beyond the
(then) three-mile territorial sea limit, none of the conventional
state or federal legislation was applicable. However, the
recently enacted National Marine Sanctuaries Act of 1972
(NMSA), offered the means for preserving the Monitor as
part of a planned national system of marine protected areas.
As a result, on January 30, 1975 the Monitor was designated
America’s irst National Marine Sanctuary, to be managed
by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), an agency of the U.S. Department of Commerce.
The Monitor National Marine Sanctuary is now part of a
system consisting of thirteen sanctuaries, with another, the
Northwestern Hawaiian Islands, in the designation process.
The wreck of the USS Monitor presented NOAA with unique
management issues. The Monitor is considered one of the
most signiicant underwater cultural heritage sites in the
United States. Listed on the National Register of Historic
Places, Monitor also has been designated a National Historic
Landmark. NOAA’s in situ management and recovery plan is
consistent with the Annex Rules to the UNESCO Convention
on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage.
Over the years, NOAA conducted extensive research at the
sanctuary and issued permits to other researchers who added
their data to the growing Monitor archive that is available
to the public. In the early 1990s, NOAA won two legal
challenges to its authority and jurisdiction to control public
access to the site by permitting access only for scientiic
research. NOAA, however, subsequently issued permits
to recreational divers to visit and photograph the wreck.
Those private divers conducted research and photographic
activities that contributed signiicantly to site documentation,
especially by generating excellent still and video imagery of
the wreck.
During this time NOAA began to accumulate strong evidence
that the Monitor’s hull was undergoing major deterioration
and that the disintegration process was accelerating.
Figure 2: US Navy divers videotaping the Monitor’s gun turret in
preparation for recovery (U.S. Navy)
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
NOAA continued gathering data at the site but also began
consulting with marine engineers and salvage experts to
identify strategies for responding to the developing crisis
at the sanctuary. There was a growing realization that even
under an in situ preservation policy, it was time to consider
alternative plans for more rigorous research and recovery at
the wreck site.
In 1998, NOAA released a long-range, comprehensive plan
for the management, stabilization, preservation, and recovery
of artifacts and materials from the Monitor, “Charting a
New Course for the Monitor.” This comprehensive plan
documents NOAA’s response to the challenging problem of
the Monitor’s deterioration, describing each major planning
element in detail and addressing all aspects of management,
protection and possible recovery. The US Navy’s salvage
contractor, Eastport International (now a division of
Oceaneering International) contributed an extensive
engineering analysis and trade study that provided valuable
recommendations on the best methods for stabilization
and recovery. After presenting and discussing numerous
options, the plan recommended a six-phase program for
stabilization of the Monitor’s hull, followed by selective
recovery of signiicant components of the hull for long-term
conservation and exhibit. The recommendations included
estimated timelines and budgets for each phase, including
recommended conservation facilities and personnel and
anticipated sources of funding for the entire program. The
advanced state of hull deterioration and the extremely high
estimated cost of total recovery and conservation prevented
NOAA from considering an option for recovery of the entire
wreck and contents.
Soon after delivery of the comprehensive plan, NOAA
was able to announce that a partnership had been formed
between NOAA, the U.S. Navy, and The Mariners’ Museum
for implementation of the plan. The necessary funding was
obtained from NOAA, the Department of Defense Legacy
Resource Management Grants Program, The Mariners’
Museum, and others.
During 1998 to 2002, NOAA and the US Navy carried out the
six-phase plan during a series of large-scale missions to the
Figure 3: NOAA researchers documenting the bow of the USS
Monitor (Doug Kesling, NOAA Monitor Collection)
The USS Monitor 1
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
the recovered hull components conirmed that recovery was
the appropriate action. Many of the iron components of the
Monitor’s engine are badly deteriorated, as are the guns and
other objects. The rest of the Monitor’s hull and contents will
remain on the seabed indeinitely, and will continue to attract
researchers and divers, while the USS Monitor Center will
permit millions of visitors to enjoy the Monitor.
Nationally, NOAA is placing more emphasis on the
underwater cultural heritage aspects of its sanctuaries
through its Maritime Heritage Program, a part of the National
Marine Sanctuary Program. The Maritime Heritage Program
is developing partnerships with other federal and state
preservation agencies in order to more effectively protect
and manage underwater culture heritage while, at the same
time, providing expanded opportunities for the public to visit
and enjoy that heritage. The Maritime Heritage Program
also is participating in the development, for broader ocean
management planning, of an inventory of cultural heritage
sites that may be potential threats to the marine environment.
NOAA will continue to emphasize resource protection while,
at the same time, ensuring that the sanctuaries’ natural and
cultural heritage is accessible—not just to visitors, but to
people worldwide through expanded online content, live
webcasts, and other education and outreach strategies.
Information Sources
Figure 4: The Monitor’s gun turret emerging from the sea,
5 August 2002 (U.S. Navy)
sanctuary. Navy divers recovered the Monitor’s propeller,
engine, and its famous gun turret, which still contained the
guns, carriages and hundreds of other artifacts. Also discovered
inside the turret were the remains of two of Monitor’s crew. All
recovered artifacts and hull components from the Monitor are
located at The Mariners’ Museum, Newport News, Virginia,
where they are undergoing conservation treatment that, for
the larger objects, may require a decade or more to complete.
The plans for conservation and curation are consistent with
the US Federal Archaeological Program as well as the Rules
annexed to the UNESCO UCH Convention.
Current NOAA Plans for Management of Underwater
Cultural Heritage
In March, 2007, the Mariners’ Museum will open the USS
Monitor Center, a major exhibition facility that will tell the
Monitor’s story within the broader context of world politics,
naval technology, and the American Civil War. The Center
also contains a major conservation laboratory, where visitors
will be able to learn about the conservation process while
observing Monitor artifacts being treated.
Although NOAA would have preferred to continue to preserve
and manage the Monitor on the seabed, close examination of
Arnold, J. Barto III, et al., 1992. “USS Monitor: Results from the
1987 Season.” Advances in Underwater Archaeology, Society for
Historical Archaeology, Vol 26, Special Publication No. 4, pp. 4758.
Clancy, Paul, 2006. Ironclad: The Epic Battle, Calamitous Loss, and
Historic Recovery of the USS Monitor. New York: International
Marine/McGraw-Hill.
Delgado, James P., 1988, “A Symbol of American Ingenuity:”
Assessing the Signiicance of U.S.S. Monitor. Washington, D. C.
Prepared for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
by the National Park Service.
Milholland, John A., 1978, “The Legal Framework of the Monitor
Marine Sanctuary.” The Monitor: Its Meaning and Future.
Washington, D. C.: The Preservation Press (The National Trust for
Historic Preservation).
Miller, Edward M., 1978, U.S.S. Monitor: The Ship That Launched
a Modern Navy. Annapolis, Maryland: Leeward Press.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). 1982
USS MONITOR National Marine Sanctuary Management Plan,
January, 1982.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). 1998
“Charting a New Course for the Monitor.” Report to the U.S.
Congress.
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). 2006
Maritime Heritage Program Website: http://www.maritimeheritage.
noaa.gov
Watts, Gordon P., Jr., 1975, “The Location and Identiication of
the ironclad USS Monitor.” International Journal of Nautical
Archaeology and Underwater Exploration (1975) 4.2:301-329.
The Molasses Reef Wreck
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Molasses Reef Wreck
Donald H. Keith
Archaeologist
Ships of Discovery
USA
Named for the reef in the Turks & Caicos Islands on which
it was found, the Molasses Reef wreck is thought to be the
oldest shipwreck discovered in the Western Hemisphere.
Complete excavation of the site produced Spanish ceramics
typical of the late 15th- and early 16th-centuries as well as
early-style wrought-iron, breech-loading ordnance. Most of
the hull of the ship had disintegrated in the shallow, waveswept waters of the reef, but about 2% remained trapped
beneath the stone ballast. In a better state of preservation
were the ship’s armaments: swivel guns, cannons, shoulder
arms, crossbows, swords, shot and grenades. Following
cleaning, conservation and analysis in the US, the entire
artifact collection was returned to the Islands where it forms
the nuclear exhibit of the Turks & Caicos National Museum.
Discovery of the Site
Figure 1: Location of the Turks & Caicos Islands with approximate
positions of late 15th- and early 16th-century shipwrecks
mentioned in historical references
Treasure Seekers” showed up claiming it had “inherited” the
site from the original discoverers — who had been jailed in
the US for poaching on another treasure hunter’s site. The
government gave Nomad permission to cruise its waters and
to “look but don’t touch,” but forbade it to visit Molasses
Reef. After a few weeks, when it became apparent that not
only had Nomad been indiscriminately hauling up cannons,
anchors and other artifacts from various sites at random
and without permission, but also had attempted to steal
artifacts from the Molasses Reef Wreck, the government had
had enough of treasure hunters. It revoked the Caribbean
Ventures salvage permit and invited archaeologists from the
Institute to excavate the Molasses Reef wreck.
Like many other Caribbean shipwreck sites, the Molasses
Reef wreck was discovered serendipitously by treasurehunters rather than by archaeologists. Although ishermen
from the Caicos Islands, who free-dive for conch and lobster
must have passed through the site many times over the years,
its lattened condition, camoulaged by nearly ive centuries
of marine growth prevented them from recognizing it as
the remains of a shipwreck. In 1976 a pair of underwater
explorers methodically searching Molasses Reef for
salvageable material spotted the site and realized that it was
an early shipwreck. They stayed long enough to illegally
raise a few artifacts, then returned to Miami.
Excavation
Four years later in 1980, under the name of “Caribbean
Ventures,” the men applied to the government of the Turks
& Caicos, a British Crown Colony, seeking permission to
prospect for and salvage shipwrecks on the Caicos Bank.
When permission was granted they announced that they had
found the wreck of Columbus’ caravel, Pinta, and that they
expected to make US $100,000,000 from marketing it and
from mining other treasure-bearing shipwrecks they said lay
nearby. The salvors’ argument that the wreck was Columbus’
Pinta was, at best, thinly supported. Not at all convinced
by the Caribbean Ventures prospectus, the Governor of the
Turks & Caicos invited Dr. Colin Martin of the Scottish
Institute of Maritime Sciences to visit the site and offer a
second opinion on its scientiic signiicance. Dr. Martin’s
report urged the government to insist that an archaeologist be
present during the salvage, and suggested the Texas A&Mbased Institute of Nautical Archaeology. The Institute sent
a two-man reconnaissance team to inspect and map the site.
A year later, another band of salvors calling itself “Nomad
The reef’s remote location, more than 26 km from the nearest
inhabited island, meant that a sea-going vessel would be
necessary to work the site. Captain Sumner Gerard made his
Miami-based 33 m research vessel Morning Watch available
to serve as the mother ship. Funding was solicited from the
Institute’s Board of Directors and a volunteer excavation team of
graduate students was hastily assembled. Arriving at Molasses
Reef on April 4, 1982, the archaeologists met an unpleasant
surprise: a huge crater, made by explosives and enlarged by
frenzied digging, occupied the center of the ballast mound.
The remains of homemade pipe bombs and intentionally
mutilated artifacts lay scattered across the sea bed. Fortunately,
the original provenances of the most salient artifacts had been
accurately mapped two years previously by the reconnaissance
team. Most of the wreck lay in water less than 6 m deep, in a
depression between “ingers” of the reef covering an area of
some 6,000 m2. A natural ship trap, Molasses Reef had captured
other victims as well, and the remains of several later maritime
disasters overlay parts of the site.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Molasses Reef Wreck
Conservation and Analysis
Six months of excavation on the reef, spread over three
years, produced more than ten tons of artifacts, all of which
were shipped more than 4,000 km back to Texas. Texas
A&M University loaned the project use of an old irehouse
located on its Research Extension Annex. Over the next
several years graduate students and volunteers cobbled
together a conservation laboratory for the Molasses Reef
Wreck artifacts, making eficient use of well-used, but still
serviceable equipment acquired from the State’s surplus
equipment depots. Pioneering studies in ballast analysis,
ordnance design and manufacture, metalography, and
sclerochronology were undertaken during the artifact
cleaning, documentation, conservation and analysis phase of
the project, which consumed seven years.
An intensive study of the ship’s ballast undertaken by
geologist William R. Lamb managed to trace some of the
stones from the ship to their most likely place of origin:
Lisbon, Portugal. Experiments carried out by Joe J.
Simmons III, discovered how the wrought-iron breechloading artillery was constructed and how the mysterious
lead-iron “composite” shot were made. Sclerochronologist
Dr. Dick Dodge of Nova University attempted to date the site
by counting the accumulation of annual growth rings in core
samples extracted from a large Montastraea annularis coral
head growing on top of the ballast mound, but the coral head
proved to be only about 250 years old — centuries younger
than the site.
The vessel’s gross dimensions were revealed by combining
clues provided by the scant remains of the ship’s wooden
hull, the distribution of ballast, and curious grooves gouged
into the seabed by structures which had entirely disintegrated.
It was a medium-size ship of the period — about 19 m long,
5 to 6 m wide and 2 m or slightly more in draft. Preserved
portions of the hull included ceiling planking, irst futtocks,
and hull planking from one side of the ship at about the
level of the turn of the bilge. No traces of keel, keelson, or
endposts survived. The fragmentary hull remains preserved
several construction features commonly found on 15th- and
16th-century Spanish ships: dovetail-joined, transverselytreenailed loors and futtocks, “illers” closing the gaps
between loors and futtocks, and the use of white oak for
every major component of the hull.
The presence of two different sizes of iron hearteye straps
suggests that the ship had at least three masts: square-rigged
fore and main masts and at least one other mast which likely
carried a lateen sail. The ship’s capacity is more dificult to
estimate: The stone ballast in the ship’s hold was carefully
calculated at 40 metric tons, to which can be added the
mass of the armaments, cargo, crew and ship’s stores. The
“permanent” ballast (large stones placed in the bottom
of the ship when it was built to trim its balance) included
black limestone originating near Bristol, England, and
alkali-olivine basalt similar to that found in the mid-Atlantic
islands; however one of the most prevalent types of stone,
high alumina basalt, appears to have originated in Lisbon,
Portugal. Another prevalent type, Miocene limestone, is
Figure 2: Mapping the locations of individual stones in the ballast
mound transect profile before removing them for petrographical
analysis
Figure 3: Surviving hull remains of the Molasses Reef Wreck in
situ
The Molasses Reef Wreck
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Creation of the Turks & Caicos National Museum
Figure 4: An “exploded” view of one of the swivel guns from the
wreck, showing all its associated parts including swivel, swivel
“saddle,” breech chamber, breech wedge, projectile, and textile
“gasket”
also found in the Lisbon area. The ballast study by itself
may not furnish a deinitive indicator of where the ship was
built or precisely which ports it visited, but it does supply
incontrovertible evidence of connections with Lisbon and
Bristol.
The ship was heavily armed, but most of the armaments were
stored and not loaded. A surprising dearth of ceramic sherds
suggests that most of the ship’s provisions were carried in
wooden casks and barrels. The crew’s modest amenities were
predominantly utilitarian: even the tableware was Spartan.
No coins or other absolutely datable objects were found, but
the characteristics of the artifact assemblage, particularly
the pottery and irearms, indicate that the ship ran aground
on Molasses Reef in the second or third decade of the 16thcentury (1510-1530). Tiny glass beads may be indicators
of trade with the Indians. Several sets of leg irons, some
of them locked, may have been part of the ship’s normal
complement of disciplinary gear, or they may have been used
to immobilize captives. The almost total absence of objects
that might be considered personal possessions argues that the
people on board survived the wreck and had suficient time
to organize its abandonment, but the fact that all the ordnance
remains on the site suggests that no one ever returned to
salvage the ship.
But even after analysis, the identity and mission of the ship
that became the Molasses Reef wreck remain a mystery. The
wreck does not appear to match any of the more than 120
European ships known to have been lost in the Americas
before 1520. Early maps show that Spanish navigators knew
of, and had often visited the Turks and Caicos Islands. The
purpose of such voyages was to capture Lucayans, the Indians
living in the Bahama and Turks & Caicos Islands when the
irst Europeans arrived, to work as slaves in the mines and
ields of Spanish Hispaniola. It is highly probable that the ship
which came to grief on Molasses Reef was engaged in this
“grey market” enterprise. Departing from Santo Domingo or
one of the other Spanish ports in the Greater Antilles, the ship
left no record of its inal voyage in Old World archives.
In 1988, responsibility for completing the project passed from
the Institute of Nautical Archaeology to Ships of Discovery,
a small, publicly-funded non-proit research institute formed
by the graduate students who had initiated and carried out
the project from the beginning. Two years later, prompted
by the sure knowledge that the Molasses Reef Wreck artifact
collection would soon be shipped to the Islands, concerned
citizens banded together to form the Turks & Caicos National
Museum, a publicly-funded, non-proit trust fully sanctioned
by but independent of the government, authorized to collect,
preserve and exhibit objects and examples of the cultural and
natural history of the Turks & Caicos Islands. A Museum
trustee donated the “Guinep Lodge,” one of the oldest houses
on Grand Turk, to become the Museum’s home.
From its new base of operations in Dallas, Ships of Discovery
completed conservation and study of the artifacts and designed
the exhibits which would house them in the Turks & Caicos
National Museum. All the artifacts and original data resulting
from the excavation were shipped to the Museum in 1990
where they now occupy the entire ground loor, and comprise
the Museum’s primary attraction. In spite of numerous
impediments, the Molasses Reef wreck remains one of very
few New World archaeological shipwreck projects actually
carried through to completion.
Although scores of caravels and other types of exploratory
vessels were wrecked in the Caribbean, only three have been
located. Of these, the Molasses Reef Wreck is the oldest, the
most complete, and the most carefully excavated. Had the
excavation not been undertaken, the fate of the Molasses Reef
wreck would have been the same as that of hundreds of other
historic shipwrecks in Caribbean waters. Following the site’s
initial discovery it would have been blasted and picked apart
by curiosity-seekers, collectors, and professional treasurehunters. One by one its artifacts would have disappeared
only to grace a mantlepiece or coffee table for a few months,
then be forgotten and eventually discarded. Nothing would
have been learned and nothing would have been preserved
for the entertainment and instruction of future generations.
In contrast, when archaeological inds are properly cared for
and held responsibly in the public trust, everyone wins. The
Molasses Reef wreck project provided the impetus for the
formation of the Turks & Caicos National Museum, which
now contains exhibits on the cultural and natural history of
the Islands as well. A source of both pride and revenue for
people of the Islands, the Museum can also be credited with
awakening a new interest in their history. This, in turn, has
spun off other endeavors such as strengthening legislation
protecting sites of historical and archaeological interest,
recording oral histories, repatriating artifacts taken from the
Islands more than a century ago, identifying and registering
the oldest structures in the Islands, and the collection,
conservation, and rebinding of the nation’s archives.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Strategic Options with Regards to
Public Access – Awareness Raising in Portugal
Francisco J. S. Alves
National Centre for Nautical and Underwater Archeology
Portugal
On the occasion of my participation in 1992 at the Lezioni di
Archeologia Subacquea di Ustica (Underwater Archaeology
Classes of Ustica), I had the opportunity to dive with Edoardo
Riccardi along the Underwater Archaeological Trail of Punta
Gavazzi, established in the Natural Park of this magniicent
small island off the coast of Sicily. The Trail of Ustica, among
the irst initiatives of this kind world-wide and largely due to
the creative instinct of this Italian archaeologist, consists of a
circuit marked out using “Ariadne’s threads” which allow the
divers to visit the archaeological remains scattered along the
trail and which are labelled using small plaques.
The experience was marvellous, and it immediately
encouraged us to develop something similar in Portugal.
Already by the following year we had set up an analogous
system at the site of the wreck of the French lagship Océan,
which sunk on 18 August 1759 off Salema beach, at a depth
of around six to nine metres, west of the Algarve during the
Seven Year War (Fig.1). The underwater trail of the Océan,
which, to our knowledge, was the irst of its kind established
in Atlantic Europe, met with a resounding success.
Figure 1: View of the underwater trail for the Océan in 1993
National Centre for Nautical and Underwater Archaeology
The underwater trail of the Océan currently represents the
irst of three initiatives spearheaded by the Centro Nacional
de Arqueologia Náutica e Subaquática (CNANS) in this
ield. In 2005, this trail was renewed using new signposting
material, 316 stainless steel plaques screwed onto a concrete
base/pedestal, with captions in Portuguese and English over
a laser-engraved background image.
The two other pilot projects by the CNANS in this area are
the trail of Faro A and that of the Pedro Nunes/Thermopylae.
The Faro A trail concerns a non-identiied ship wreck located
off the Santa Maria cape, near the city of Faro, capital of the
Algarve province in southern Portugal. The wreck consists
of an oblong tumulus situated at twenty metres below on a
sandy seabed (Fig. 2). The wreck was dated not through the
large amount of iron artillery scattered around, but rather
by pewter plates bearing a hallmark/stamp identiied as
belonging to the Edgecumbe family, from Cornwall, dating
to the last quarter of the 17th-century. One of the hypotheses
put forward towards its identiication is that the ship was
part of an Anglo-Dutch squadron, known as the “Smyrna
Convoy,” which was attacked by the French squadron of
Admiral Tourville at the end of the century. Diving at this site
was strictly forbidden until 2003, after which IPA/CNANS
signed a cooperation agreement with one of the diving
National Centre for Nautical and Underwater Archaeology
Figure 2: Side scan sonar image of the wreck of the Faro A
schools in Faro (Hidroespaço) in view of organising guided
tours. Coordinated by the CNANS, a trail around the wreck
was set up and the school’s instructors, who had followed
introductory training in nautical archaeology organised by
the CNANS on the basis of the model developed by the UK’s
Nautical Archaeology Society (NAS), started supervising
visiting divers.
The trail of the Pedro Nunes/Thermopylae concerns the
wreck of the “twin” and rival clipper of the Cutty Sark. This
tall ship, which was considered to be the fastest in the history
of the sailing leet, was bought by the Portuguese navy at the
end of the 19th-century and sunk in 1907 during a maritime
festival in Cascais, in the presence of the King. Located in
2001 by side scanning sonar at a depth of 30m, the wreck is
being examined by several teams of divers, coordinated by
the CNANS, in view of setting up a trail that can be visited.
The project is supported by the Municipality of Cascais with
whom the CNANS has also signed a cooperation agreement.
Furthermore, to raise awareness among and train a wider
variety of people, in particular amateur divers, the CNANS
adopted the NAS philosophy and training programme, with
which it also signed a cooperation agreement giving it the
status of a training centre in the framework of the NAS
amateur courses. This training course, adopted by several
countries across all continents and a number of large
international diving organisations, such as CMAS and PADI,
is the continuation of a similar experiment started ten years
ago by the National Archaeological Museum in Lisbon
(MNA) and the non-proit cultural association Arqueonáutica
(Fig. 3).
Obviously, the organisation and participation at conferences
and scientiic meetings, and the subsequent publication of
their proceedings and catalogues, as well as the staging of
exhibitions, continue to be formidable tools for dissemination,
both to the wider public and to specialists. Such initiatives
have always taken place in the framework of the overall
underwater archaeology strategy developed by the MNA and
subsequently by the CNANS, during the past twenty-ive
years.
With regards to the most recent exhibitions, one must
mention the thematic display case created in 2002 at the
Maritime Museum of Lisbon, dedicated to the site of the
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
wreck of the Nau da India (a Portuguese Indiaman), Nossa
Senhora dos Mártires, excavated by the CNANS from
1997-1998, whose results were presented in the Portuguese
Pavilion during Expo’98, and which have since then been
the subject of much literature. Again in 2002, the CNANS
organised together with the Municipal Museum of Portimão
an exhibition concerning the underwater cultural heritage of
the Arade River, presented at the MNA in 2003. The majority
of the information, artefacts, graphic and photographic
documentation was provided by the CNANS. The other
substantial part of the material evidence came from a totally
new project, launched in 2000 by the CNANS in cooperation
with a local amateur group (the association IPSIIS), which
consisted of archaeological prospecting on beaches using
metal detectors.
Furthermore, research by the CNANS on the wreck of
the 15th-century ship Ria de Aveiro A have led to a novel
technical and methodological approach, consisting of fullscale plywood and polyurethane models (“2D” and “3D”)
(Figs. 4). This method will soon be applied to the wreck of
the ship Arade 1, dating from the 16th-century, which was
discovered in 1970 when the river was dredged but which
subsequently re-buried itself. Located in 2001 by the CNANS
and excavated in a series of annual campaigns until 2005, this
wreck has since 2003 been the subject of a PhD thesis at the
University of Paris I - IAA under the direction of Eric Rieth.
It is important to underline that the creation of a full-scale
model has proved highly effective in museographic terms,
as shown by the 2004 exhibition of the wreck of the Ria
de Aveiro A at the Maritime Museum of Ílhavo, one of the
Municipalities on the lagoon of the Aveiro, which witnessed
one of the most important maritime adventures in Portugal’s
history: deep-sea ishing. It coincided with another exhibition
organised simultaneously by the CNANS, focusing on the Ria
de Aveiro and the most important nautical and underwater
archaeological inds in Portugal, presented in Aveiro itself, in
the emblematic old harbourmaster’s building, inaugurated on
Figure 3: Introductory course to underwater archaeology in the
swimming pool
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
National Centre for Nautical and Underwater Archaeology
Figure 4: 1:1 scale models in plywood and
polyurethane, so called “2D” and “3D”, of
the 15th century wreck Ria de Aveiro A, at the
CNANS
this occasion as the seat of the Municipal Assembly and now
featuring a vast temporary exhibition hall.
This, in short, is how the CNANS ensures and develops
public access –awareness raising in the ield of underwater
cultural heritage in Portugal.
Information Sources
Alves, F. 1990-1992 [1997] – “O Itinerário Arqueológico
Subaquático do Océan.” O Arqueólogo Português, IV-8/10 : 455467. MNA. Lisbonne.
on Archaeology of Medieval and Modern Ships of Iberian-Atlantic
Tradition - Hull remains, manuscripts and ethnographic sources:
a comparative approach (Academia de Marinha, Lisbonne, 7-9
septembre 1998). Trabalhos de Arqueologia 18: 317-345. IPA.
Lisbonne.
Alves, F. et al. 2001b, “Ria de Aveiro A : a shipwreck from
Portugal dating to the mid-15th century; a preliminary report.”
The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 30.1:12-36.
Londres.
Alves, F. 1997 – “Em torno dos projectos da zona arqueológica
da Boca do Rio e do Océan (1º Encontro de Arqueologia da Costa
Sudoeste, Sagres, 1991).” Setúbal Arqueológica, 11-12: 225-239,
MAES. Setúbal.
Castro, F. 2001, “The remains of a Portuguese Indiaman at the mouth
of the Tagus, Lisbon, Portugal. In Alves, F. (Ed.)” In Proceedings
of the International Symposium on Archaeology of Medieval
and Modern Ships of Iberian-Atlantic Tradition, Hull remains,
manuscripts and ethnographic sources: a comparative approach
(Academia de Marinha, Lisbonne, 7-9 septembre 1998). Trabalhos
de Arqueologia 18: 381-403. IPA. Lisbonne.
Alves, F. 1999 – “L’ itinéraire archéologique subaquatique de l’
Océan.” In Sessão Cultural de Recepção à Academia de Marinha
Francesa de visita a Portugal (le 13 mai 1999): 31-38. Academia de
Marinha. Lisbonne.
Castro, F. 2005a, “The Pepper Wreck. A Portuguese Indiaman at
the Mouth of the Tagus River. Ed. Rachal Foundation,” Nautical
Archaeology Series. Texas A & M University Press - College
Station. Texas.
Alves, F. 2003 – “Anatomia de um naufrágio. Apontamento sobre
a perda da Nau da Índia Nossa Senhora dos Mártires, destroçada
em 1606 junto à fortaleza de São Julião na barra do rio Tejo.” In V
Encontro de História Local do Concelho de Oeiras - Oeiras: o Tejo
e a Expansão: 15-26. Câmara Municipal de Oeiras.
Castro, F. 2005b, “Rigging the Pepper Wreck – Masts and Yards.”
The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 34.1: 110-122.
Londres.
Alves F. et Garrido, A. 2004, “Um Mergulho na História - o Navio
do Século XV Ria de Aveiro A ”. Brochure-catalogue de l’exposition
présentée au Museu Marítimo de Ílhavo.
Alves, F. et al. 1998, “Arqueologia de um naufrágio. In Nossa
Senhora dos Mártires - A última Viagem: 183-215. Catálogo.
Pavilhão de Portugal / Expo’98. Lisbonne.
Alves, F. et al. 2001a – “The hull remains of Ria de Aveiro A, a
mid-15th century shipwreck from Portugal: a preliminary analysis.
In Alves, F. (Ed.)” – In Proceedings of the International Symposium
Fialho, A. 2004, “O Museu do Mar de Cascais e o património
subaquático – O projecto Pedro Nunes.” Actas do Seminário “Os
Museus e o Património Náutico e Subaquático ”: 61-64, Câmara
Municipal de Portimão.
Loureiro, V. 2004, “O navio Arade 1: uma embarcação do início da
Época Moderna.” Actas do Seminário “Os Museus e o Património
Náutico e Subaquático ”: 43-51. Câmara Municipal de Portimão.
Sousa, J. et Viegas, P. 2004, “Projecto IPSIS – fragmentos de
História nas praias do Arade.” Actas do Seminário “Os Museus e
o Património Náutico e Subaquático”: 27-30. Câmara Municipal
de Portimão.
Shipwreck
Shipwreck:
Threatened in Paradise
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Paul F. Johnston
Curator of Maritime History
National Museum of American History
USA
One of the justiications most commonly cited by treasure
hunters for why they need to salvage a shipwreck is that the
site is in danger of decaying to nothing if left alone at the
bottom of the sea or lakebed. In fact, one of the guiding legal
principles of marine salvage in some places is that a wreck—
even one that may have been underwater for hundreds or
thousands of years — is “endangered,” and anyone who
“rescues” it through recovery of its contents therefore should
be entitled to a inancial reward, not only for the rescue, but
also for the risk and expenditure of one’s own assets in the
recovery effort.
In actual fact, nearly all shipwrecks that sink in water
deep enough to escape immediate salvage undergo a very
gradual transition period, from being intact on the bottom
to gradually crumbling while fasteners, hull sections or
wooden components deteriorate and inally fail, becoming
latter as the contents compress and settle into one another
and the surrounding matrix. As a wreck becomes covered by
sand, coral, mud or silt overburden which seals it off from
the harmful effects of oxygen, it will eventually reach a state
of stabilization, where it can remain for hundreds, or even
thousands of years. By far the greatest potential for damage to
any shipwreck site is human intervention, which can disrupt
its stable environment and hasten its decline. The wreck of
the ocean liner Titanic, which has been signiicantly damaged
by tourist submarine collisions and propeller backwash, is an
iconic example of this sort of activity.
There is an even more graphic, if less known, example of a
seriously threatened shipwreck site: the wreck of Hawaiian
King Kamehameha II’s royal yacht. Built at a cost of
Figure 1: Map of Hanalei Bay on the north shore of the island of
Kauai, Hawaii. The asterisk at the bottom indicates the location of
the 1824 wreck of the Royal Yacht of King Kamehameha II
(Map by Kenneth Spaulding, courtesy Smithsonian Institution)
Figure 2: Underwater archaeologists record the poorly-preserved
hull timbers of the famous wreck of the early Royal Hawaiian Yacht
Pride of Hawaii (P.F. Johnston)
$100,000 at Salem, MA in 1816 as the irst oceangoing yacht
in the United States, Cleopatra’s Barge was the extravagant
dream of wealthy local citizen George Crowninshield, Jr.
He died shortly after returning from a single cruise to the
Mediterranean in 1817, and she was sold to the Boston China
trading company Bryant & Sturgis in 1820. They in turn sold
her to the King of Hawaii in late 1820 for $80,000 worth of
sandalwood, a prized China trade commodity used for such
diverse purposes as incense and cabinetry. No fewer than
three books have been written about the irst four years of the
famous ship’s history.
King Kamehameha renamed the storied vessel Ha‘aheo
o Hawaii (Pride of Hawaii) and used her for the next four
years as his private yacht, a cargo and passenger transport,
a diplomatic vehicle and even once as a pirate ship. In 1824,
while the king was en route to England on a diplomatic
mission, a native Hawaiian crew sailed her to the north shore
of the island of Kauai and wrecked her in the southwest
corner of Hanalei Bay on 6 April 1824. The ship struck a
ive-foot deep reef just a hundred yards offshore and sank on
the spot, after an unsuccessful salvage attempt by the local
population.
The wreck of Cleopatra’s Barge was threatened for reasons
different from those evoked by treasure hunters, perhaps for
no other reason than archaeologists found it before the salvor
community did. Most of the earliest threats were generated
by natural agents, rather than human. The irst two were
revealed as early as 30 December 1844, when a large section
of the barge’s hull washed ashore during a winter surge. A
Honolulu newspaper reported, “Many of the oak timbers are
in quite a sound state, except so far as perforated by the teredo
or ship-worm.” The teredo worm, the underwater equivalent
of a voracious underwater termite, had chewed through the
wreck’s wooden hull, weakening it and possibly causing the
structural damage that allowed a section to wash ashore.
The second natural factor that started to break up the hull was
the powerful winter surf and unpredictable storm surge, which
Shipwreck
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
had the entire Paciic Ocean to build unhampered from as far
north as the Arctic. Human effort also threatened the wreck
a few years later, when in 1857, a local Hawaiian salvaged
two cannon and a windlass from the wreck site. Then, two
tsunamis struck Kauai’s North shore in the 1940s and 1950s,
battering the bay’s shallow waters and disturbing its contents
even further. Finally, in September 1991, the famous hurricane
Iniki battered the island; the storm’s eye actually stalled over
the bay, pummeling it further and gradually starting to grind
the wreck into pepper against the hard coral bay bottom.
This combination of natural and human agents threatening
the preservation of one of New England’s most famous
shipwrecks for 170 years called for action, before another
storm could destroy forever whatever material culture from
the royal ship might still exist. Although this Hawaiian
monarch had only reigned for ive years, he had consolidated
all of the island chain under his reign, abolished the taboo
system, and introduced wide-scale Christianity into the
islands. Not one single artifact existed from his reign, apart
from the contents of this shipwreck.
As a consequence, in 1994 the Smithsonian Institution’s
National Museum of American History obtained the irst
underwater archaeological permits ever issued by the state
of Hawaii. From 1995-2000 the ship was scientiically
excavated, providing unparalleled information about the
transitional period in Hawaiian history from the lifeways
of Old Hawaii to a kingdom irrevocably pointed towards
Euro-American value systems and eventual annexation by
the United States. More than 1,200 lots of artifacts were
recovered from the badly preserved underwater site, and
a 40-foot section of the royal ship’s stern was discovered,
documented and covered over, committing it to its watery
grave once again. Several articles and book chapters have
disseminated the archaeological results of the multi-year
investigations, and a book and museum exhibit are well into
the planning phase at this writing.
Figure 3: Cleopatra’s Barge in August 1818, painted by deaf-andmute artist George Ropes of Marblehead, Massachusetts, USA; the
yacht, which cost the modern equivalent of ca. $13 million dollars,
was so unusual that as many as 8,000 visitors per day boarded
the vessel during her 1817 Mediterranean cruise (Courtesy of the
Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts, USA)
Figure 4: This historical reconstruction depicts the native Hawaiian
attempt to salvage the shipwreck in May 1824; in the foreground,
Boston missionary Hiram Bingham preaches a sermon to the native
inhabitants on the evils of drink, which was a factor in the ship’s
loss (Painting by Richard W. Rogers, courtesy of the Smithsonian
Institution)
Further Reading
Crowninshield, Francis B., The Story of George Crowninshield’s
Yacht Cleopatra’s Barge on a Voyage of Pleasure to the Western
Islands and the Mediterranean 1816-1817 (Boston, Massachusetts:
Privately Printed, 1913)
Ferguson, David L., Cleopatra’s Barge: The Crowninshield Story
(Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1976)
Johnston, Paul F., “Cleopatra’s Barge: Kauai, Hawaii,” in George F.
Bass, (ed.), Beneath the Seven Seas (London: Thames & Hudson:
2005) 213-217.
Johnston, Paul F., “A Million Pounds of Sandalwood: The History of
Cleopatra’s Barge in Hawaii,” The American Neptune 63.1 (Winter
2002) 5-45.
Johnston, Paul F., “Preliminary Report on the 1998 Excavations of
the 1824 Wreck of the Royal Hawaiian Yacht Ha‘aheo o Hawaii
(ex-Cleopatra’s Barge), in A.A. Askins and M.W. Russell (eds.),
Underwater Archaeology 1999. Tucson: Society for Historical
Archaeology, 1999. 107-114.
0 The Urbieta Wreck
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Urbieta Wreck
(Gernika) Basque Country
Manuel Izaguirre
Center for Underwater Investigations INSUB
Palacio del Almirante Okendo
Spain
The Gernika estuary (ria) represents one of the oldest and
most important luvial waterways penetrating the Basque
coast.
Its mouth was historically barred by moving sandbanks, its
estuary, protected from the dominant northwest winds by
the Matxitxaco cape and the island of Izaro. However, the
waterway has always been an attractive ship route towards
the interior of the region, in particular as its depth makes it
navigable up to the city of Gernika, over six km inland from
the sea.
The most important records conirming that this estuary has
been in use since antiquity are to be found in the Roman
settlements of Portuondo o Forua. After that we have to refer
to the documentary evidence describing the commercial
route of ore carriers and barges with varying cargo up to
Gernika and the ports of other municipalities on the estuary.
The presence of foundries and the activity of the inhabitants
of this mining basin dedicated to the transformation of iron
are fundamental when evaluating the importance of the
navigation and the port activity in this estuary.
Legislation
The Statute of Autonomy of the Basque Country agreed
between the Spanish and Basque governments recognizes,
among other values, culture and the historic, artistic,
ethnographic and archaeological heritage as being under the
exclusive authority of the Autonomous Basque Community.
In exercising this responsibility, the Basque government
voted the Basque Cultural Heritage Law n° 7/1990, of 3 July,
to regulate activities concerning cultural heritage. According
to the Basque Cultural Heritage Law, archaeological remains
can be protected under three separate legal regimes:
•
Declared
Archaeological
Arqueológicos Declarados)
Properties
(Bienes
•
Archaeological Properties on the Listed Inventory
(Bienes Arqueológicos Inventariados)
•
Areas of Potential Archaeological Interest (Zonas de
Presunto Interés Arqueológico.)
To carry out any intervention on these properties or areas,
permission must be sought from the Department of Culture of
the Regional Council of the concerned historic area including
the presentation of preliminary plans for the archaeological
project.
Equally, considering the natural values of the Gernika
estuary and the whole Urdaibai basin, in 1984 UNESCO
declared this area a Biosphere Reserve. The protection of the
Biosphere Reserve is regulated by the Law for the Protection
and Regulation of the Biosphere Reserve of Urdaibai passed
by the Basque government on 6 July 1989. Nevertheless, no
speciic archaeological plan exists for this Park which gives
priority to the protection of any possible discoveries related to
the luvial navigation, taking into account the inds that have
already appeared and the historical tradition in this regard.
Impact and Archaeology
In 1998, works to channel the river Oka started in the vicinity
of the town of Gernika, in two areas called “Urbieta” and
“Portuzarra” (Basque words meaning “between two waters”
Figure 1: Aerial view of the
dig; at the extreme right
of the wreck is the stern
and at the left is seen the
transverse gap caused by
the excavation equipment
during the dredging of the
Oka river
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
The Urbieta Wreck 1
and “old port” respectively). As the area does not beneit
from any preventive archaeological protection, no provision
was made for archaeological investigation in the project for
the works.
Faced with this situation, an archaeologist regularly working
in the region alerted the Town Council to the dangers
with regards to the defenceless situation of the municipal
archaeological heritage in the area where the public works
were about to start. Following this denunciation, the Town
Council fortunately decided, although it was under no legal
obligation, to approve a special budget for archaeological
monitoring of the works that had started.
Description of the Finds
In July 1998, under four meters of earth and mud at the
conluence of the Golako, a left bank tributary to the Gernika
estuary, a backhoe excavator used to build a breakwater to
channel the river, partially destroyed, but at the same time
discovered, a wreck dating from the second half of the 15th
century. It proved to be the only medieval ship encountered
until now in the Basque Country and was named after the
location of its inding, the Urbieta.
The archaeological impact of the works threatened to totally
destroy the recently discovered wreck Urbieta, since the
channelling wall would have been built exactly where it lay.
Therefore, once the municipal and provincial institutions
had been alerted, the Council of Bizkaia agreed upon the
necessity to excavate and salvage the wreck, for which Manu
Izaguirre, author of this text, and Luis Valdés, archaeologist
for the region, drew up the corresponding archaeological
intervention plan. This plan proposed the excavation,
investigation and complete salvage of the wreck in view of
its subsequent conservation.
The vessel was resting on a river bank gently sloping
downwards towards the present water level, on top of a series
of layers of eroded iron ore gravel. Over this layer of iron ore
gravel, alternating layers of mud or sand covered the wreck
and bore witness to an important transport activity of this
mineral in this area.
All the above leads us to believe that the mineral remains
found around the vessel could correspond to the period from
when the hull was abandoned until it was discovered in its
present situation. Nevertheless, we cannot eliminate the
hypothesis that the vessel was also used, at an undetermined
frequency, to transport the mineral.
Through the excavations it was possible to observe that the
vessel had run aground on its port side which, despite its
destruction, had kept all its strakes from its keel to its gunnel.
On the starboard side only remains of the garboard strake and
of some other strakes were found pushed inwards towards the
port side.
The central part of the vessel, along about one-third of its length
had been destroyed by the backhoe excavator. While most of
the solid pieces could be salvaged, many of the construction
details of this part were lost such as the keelson and the
Figure 2: In order to extract the wreck from the silt of the river, it
was required to detach it from the ground by creating a platform
of horizontal tubes
Figure 3: Once detached from the silt, it required a large crane
to lift the block of the wreck onto the bed of a special truck of
adjustable height
Figure 4: After a careful cleaning of the wreck, the details and
design of the archaeological remains were recorded, indispensable
for the recreation and elaboration of the real and hypothetical
forms of the architecture of the boat
The Urbieta Wreck
mast step. The general morphology of the vessel consists of
a “clinker-built” hull, a construction form used on our coast
until the middle of the 16th-century and which implies a “hull
irst” construction system where the hull is built before the
rib structure which sustains it once completed. In contrast,
since the beginning of the 16th-century until today, the carvel
system, or edge-to-edge planking, became dominant.
Extraction
During the excavation process, great dificulties were met
in dismantling the vessel to extract it from its site due to
the large quantity and excellent condition of the treenails
fastening together the strakes of the clinker-built hull. The
option of cutting all the treenails implied an excessive
archaeological invasion, which is why it was decided to
extract the wreck in one piece. This approach presented
signiicant challenges, including the cost of the operation, the
subsequent consolidation and inal restitution of the original
shape of the hull.
To raise the vessel, the surroundings of the vessel were
excavated up to a depth of 1.6m over a suficiently wide
area to obtain a horizontal plane that allowed the boring
of transversal tunnelling holes and placement of a series
of parallel horizontal tubes under the vessel. Taking into
account the irregularity of the mud and sand under the boat,
a blocking fence was built around the structure using wooden
boards and a metal structure to a height of 60 cm.
The horizontal layer of tubes thus created also served as a
base for the earthen block on which the vessel was resting.
Once this was reinforced by the metal structure, it was
extracted using a heavy-duty crane and placed onto a truck/
lorry of adjustable height, which transported the whole block
to a temporary storehouse near the location of the ind.
Treatment and Restitution of Shape
After all material not part of the vessel (such as mud, sand
and consolidation structures) had been removed, the vessel
was placed in a metal crate/cage, which was lowered into a
bath of PEG 400, at a concentration of 75% and temperature
of 60 C° for a period of two years.
Once the treatment had been completed and the weight and
length measurements of the treatment control test-bores had
been veriied, the excess PEG was eliminated and the vessel
was packed for transport to the shipyard where the formal
shape of its hull was to be restored.
The museographic plan of the Urbieta vessel was to relate
its inal appearance to its operational life: the archaeological
remains that had been recovered were to be reshaped into the
original form of the boat. To this end, the original ship’s lines
were recreated. As the archaeological remains comprised
only two-thirds of the port side, didactic/educational needs
provided us with the justiication to reconstitute the missing
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
portion of the craft. To achieve this objective, ine steel ribs
shaped to sustain the hull from the outside were combined
with thin longitudinal battens of the same material. These
were placed in the axis of the strakes to give a more realistic
impression of the volume of the vessel.
In this project of re-shaping, and using other examples
from across the world, the advantage of using comparative
full-scale or reduced scale reproductions became evident.
It allows for the presentation of the details of the vessel
to the visitors: its equipment, load capacity and aspects of
use and life on board. Placing the scale model next to the
archaeological remains allows for immediate comparison
of both and helps the general public better understand the
association of these elements which would otherwise mean
very little. To reconstitute the vessel’s original shape, it was
necessary to develop tentative plans based on the drawings
of the excavated remains and also based on the laboratory
drawings of each piece.
The plans of the boat’s remains were drawn up by Aurelie
Montagne, Joao Alves and Miguel Aleluya and the
architectural investigation was directed by Eric Rieth. The
development of plans of the hypothetical original form was
carried out by naval architect Marc Ginisty. The conservation
treatment was directed by Anna Jover in cooperation with
Caterina Agüer, and the restitution of the inal forms was
carried out by Xavier Agote and his team. Manu Izaguirre
coordinated the overall project.
Once this process had been completed, the boat was taken
to the Maritime Museum of the Bilbao estuary on 9 January
2006 where it will be exhibited, only a few kilometres away
from Gernika where it had been discovered seven years
before. The entire operation was made possible thanks to the
private initiative, good will and discernment of the local and
regional institutions, whose competencies do not include the
legal protection of archaeology in the Bizkaia area.
Conclusion
The wreck of Urbieta is a irst class discovery as it is the only
boat of this period and typology that has been found so far
on the Cantabrian coast. This has allowed specialists in the
ield to look for links between its shape and design and the
various traditions of boatbuilding in the northern Atlantic.
Among these specialists, particular mention has to be
made of the research group from Parks Canada involved in
the study of the 16th century Basque whaleboats. For this
group, the Urbieta wreck represents the only evidence of
Basque boatbuilding prior to the aforementioned whaleboat,
which gives it an extraordinary value, both at the local and
international level.
Had this endangered site not been archaeologically rescued,
an important chapter of Basque boatbuilding would have
been destroyed. A historically valuable and non-renewable
resource would have been lost forever.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage in French Polynesia
Fifteen Years of Work by GRAN
Max Guérout
Vice-president
Research Group for Naval Archaeology (GRAN)
France
Robert Veccella
Head Archaeologist
Polynesian GRAN Team
Tahiti
French Polynesia, an Overseas Country:
A Specific Regulatory Framework
Since March 12, 2004, French Polynesia has been an “Overseas
Country” (formerly an overseas territory) within the French
Republic. It is a freely and democratically self-governing
autonomous overseas community. The High Commissioner
of the Republic is the representative of the State and holds
its powers. More simply, the State is responsible for all
matters relating to nationality and civil rights; justice; foreign
policy; defense and security; currency; some air transport and
maritime regulations; municipal administration; the public
service; audiovisual communication; and inally, university
education and research. Archaeological research, on the
other hand, is the responsibility of French Polynesia. The
regulations governing underwater archaeology are, however,
the same as those in effect in metropolitan France. The
Heritage Code has been in effect in French Polynesia since
2004. It includes Consolidated Law No. 89-874 of December
1, 1989 on maritime cultural property, which has been in
effect in the territory for more than ten years.
Given this speciic legal context, we leave it to the legal
authorities to determine whether the UNESCO Convention
on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage is
subject to the accession of French Polynesia.
GRAN Activities in French Polynesia
The Research Group for Naval Archaeology (Groupe de
recherche en archéologie navale, or “GRAN”) is a non-proit
association dedicated to underwater archaeology, maritime
history and maritime cultural heritage. The GRAN team
in French Polynesia was established in 1990. Prior to that
time, there had been no scientiic research on underwater
cultural heritage. The only activities were the usual recovery
of anchors, cannons, wreckage or hewn stone by underwater
contractors, ishermen, divers or private individuals, for
collections, trophies or sale. A number of ethnologists
and archaeologists, primarily Anglo-Saxons, had studied
land archaeology since the beginning of the 20th-century,
while French research began with Pierre Vérin in the early
1960s. Underwater archaeology, however, had received no
attention.
In the past ifteen years, GRAN has been involved in a wide
variety of activities in French Polynesia. The conclusion of a
GRAN in French Polynesia
framework agreement with the Ministry of Culture, assigning
us responsibility for an inventory of Polynesia’s underwater
heritage, has made it possible to begin looking at the problem
of underwater archaeology as a whole.
Three types of activities have been undertaken in connection
with the responsibility entrusted to us:
1. Systematic review of archival and documentary
sources, to establish as complete a list as possible of the
shipwrecks that have occurred in the area.
2. Survey of underwater workers (divers, underwater
contractors, ishermen) to establish an inventory of
known underwater relics.
3. Operations to verify information on the sites inventoried:
exploration, expert appraisals or excavations undertaken
on our own initiative or at the request of the Polynesian
Ministry of Culture.
GRAN has also carried out operations at the request of other
agencies or associations, including museums, municipalities
and local or metropolitan French associations. It has also
been assigned responsibility by the Ministry of Culture for
overseeing the archaeological research being conducted by
an Anglo-Saxon team.
At the same time, GRAN has undertaken to:
4. Provide information on its activities to the media and
the public.
5. Educate decision-makers and students on the protection
of underwater cultural heritage through an educational
program in the schools.
Education on the Protection of Underwater Heritage
Since 2000, every GRAN operation has included a
multilingual daily log on its website at www.archeonavale.
org. This log, our primary tool for communication, allows
members of the public to monitor the progress of the work.
Between 300 and 500 people follow every stage of our
archaeological operations on a daily basis. The log does more
than simply recount events; the documents that accompany it
give readers a more complete view of the technical, historical,
archaeological and environmental aspects of the operation.
To allow teachers from different school systems to use the
site for educational purposes, the texts are presented in three
languages: French, Tahitian and English. Some other GRAN
sites, depending on their location, use other languages as
well, such as Spanish or Arabic.
Raising student awareness does not stop at the computer screen.
GRAN carries out activities in the schools to ensure that even
the very youngest children are aware of the need to protect
our underwater heritage. These activities take the form of
guided three-level exhibits that allow the children to discover,
discuss and handle materials. In some cases, GRAN responds
GRAN in French Polynesia
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
GRAN in French Polynesia
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
to individual requests for assistance on educational projects
(marine trades, wildlife, plant life, environmental protection,
etc.) by providing speciic additional information.
While certain passes in the Polynesian islands contain similar
objects and some have been looted, this is the irst time that a
site of this kind has been studied.
GRAN also attends cultural or environmental events (mayors’
conferences, sea days, island language days, etc.), at which it
interacts with the general public. It has established excellent
relations with the Department of Culture, the Museum of
Tahiti and the Islands, and the Customs Administration, and
participates in the marine science activities of the Natural
Sites and Monuments Commission. Its primary concern is
to ensure that marine engineering operations are aware of the
needs of underwater archaeology.
The discovery of underwater sites of this kind poses the
problem of protecting them against looting. Although this
discovery was kept secret for some time by the man who irst
located it, it was beginning to arouse greed among individuals
who do not subscribe to the UNESCO precept: “Underwater
cultural heritage shall not be commercially exploited.”
Example of a Protective Measure:
Excavation of the Tupaparau Underwater Site in
Mo’orea
This campaign was triggered by the discovery of numerous
stone objects in Mo’orea near Tupaparau Pass in the Afareaitu
lagoon. The site was discovered by Mr. Lailau Matahiapo,
a well-known Polynesian diver. He kept it secret for three
years, before deciding to inform the members of the “Na
To E Va’u No Aimeho Nui” Association so that protective
measures could be taken.
Alerted by the President of the Association and the senior
assistant to the mayor of the island, the Minister of Culture
asked the GRAN team in Polynesia to assume responsibility
for organizing and carrying out excavation operations. Initial
assessment dives were followed by archaeological recovery
work between February 22 and April 6, 2003 to avoid possible
looting.
The site is signiicant in terms of both its size (nearly 250
by 50 metres) and the number of articles that it contains
(between 2,000 and 3,000). These include not only hewn
or worked stone objects, but also volcanic rocks apparently
in their natural state. The worked objects found (several
hundred) relate to ishing: anchors and ishing weights for
lines or nets. Some stones may have come from ceremonial
sites such as Marae, while others include unworked basalt
prisms, inished basalt tools (adzes) and a very small number
of domestic objects, such as a pestle and other less readily
identiiable objects.
Figure 1: (Top) Two divers label anchors and stone fishing weights
in the central portion of the site; the concentration of objects is
due to the slope of the site and its relief: coral masses, faults and
differences in height (GRAN Polynesia © 2003)
Figure 2: (Lower Left) After being identified on the bottom,
positioned and photographed, objects are removed and brought
to land; they are placed in freshwater tanks for several days for
desalination (GRAN Polynesia © 2003)
Figure 3: (Lower Right) View of anchors and fishing weights from
square R9. Each object has an identification label; the method
used in this case was a PVC plate (bearing a number written with
an indelible felt pen) attached by an elastic band; this method
has proven unsatisfactory in areas affected by swell (loss of
labels); in addition, the elastic breaks down in the medium term
(GRAN Polynesia © 2003)
This campaign, set up in less than two months, has made it
possible to study the archaeological site and to protect nearly
700 objects.
In conclusion, French Polynesia represents an area of 1800
km x 1800 km, including 118 islands and atolls. Given the
signiicance of underwater archaeology in this very large
area, GRAN’s activities and the means available to it remain
relatively limited in practice, but its constant presence, its
network of informants, its ield work and efforts to develop
public awareness have helped to publicize the concept
of underwater cultural heritage. As the excavation of the
Tupaparau underwater site in Mo’orea indicates, GRAN also
represents an effective tool when the Ministry of Culture is
called upon to respond to an urgent situation.
Information Sources
Veccella, R. 2004. “La fouille archéologique sous-marine du site
de la passe Tupapaurau à Mo’orea.” Horizon Magazine, No. 350,
June 2004, pp. 26-32.
Veccella, R. 2004. “L’archéologie sous-marine en Polynésie
française, in Tutela, Conservation e Valorisatione del Patrimoinio
Culturale Subacqueo” (Mediterraneum 4), Fabio Maniscalco (Ed.),
Massa Editore, Naples, 2004, pp. 123-130.
Veccella, R. and M. Guérout. 2005. “ Fouille du site lagonnaire
entre l’îlot Ahi et la passe de Tupapaurau, Moorea, Polynésie,” in
Bilan scientiique du DRASSM 2003, Paris, 2005, pp. 104-105.
Veccella, R. (in press). “The GRAN Underwater Inventory of
French Polynesia”, in Finishing the Interrupted Voyage: Papers of
the UNESCO Asia-Paciic Workshop on the 2001 Convention on the
Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage, 18-20 November
2003, Hong Kong SAR, China, ed. L.V. Prott (Institute of Art and
Law, Leicester, UK), in press, 2006.
Veccella, R. and M. Guérout (in press). “Excavaciones arqueológicas
en el sitio submarino del paso Tupapaurau, Moorea (Polinesia
francesa).” VI International Conference on Easter Island and the
Paciic in Viña del Mar, Chile, September 21-25, 2004.
Veccella, R. and M. Guérout (in press). “The 2003 underwater
excavation of the Channel of the Many Ghosts” (Moorea – French
Polynesia).
UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage
UNESCO Convention on the
Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage
UNESCO
Paris, 2 November 2001
The General Conference of the United Nations Educational,
Scientiic and Cultural Organization, meeting in Paris from
15 October to 3 November 2001, at its 31st session,
Acknowledging the importance of underwater cultural
heritage as an integral part of the cultural heritage of humanity
and a particularly important element in the history of peoples,
nations, and their relations with each other concerning their
common heritage,
Realizing the importance of protecting and preserving the
underwater cultural heritage and that responsibility therefore
rests with all States,
Noting growing public interest in and public appreciation of
underwater cultural heritage,
Convinced of the importance of research, information and
education to the protection and preservation of underwater
cultural heritage,
Convinced of the public’s right to enjoy the educational and
recreational beneits of responsible non-intrusive access
to in situ underwater cultural heritage, and of the value of
public education to contribute to awareness, appreciation and
protection of that heritage,
Aware of the fact that underwater cultural heritage is
threatened by unauthorized activities directed at it, and of the
need for stronger measures to prevent such activities,
Conscious of the need to respond appropriately to the possible
negative impact on underwater cultural heritage of legitimate
activities that may incidentally affect it,
Deeply concerned by the increasing commercial exploitation
of underwater cultural heritage, and in particular by certain
activities aimed at the sale, acquisition or barter of underwater
cultural heritage,
Aware of the availability of advanced technology that
enhances discovery of and access to underwater cultural
heritage,
Believing that cooperation among States, international
organizations,
scientiic
institutions,
professional
organizations, archaeologists, divers, other interested parties
and the public at large is essential for the protection of
underwater cultural heritage,
Considering that survey, excavation and protection of
underwater cultural heritage necessitate the availability
and application of special scientiic methods and the use of
suitable techniques and equipment as well as a high degree
of professional specialization, all of which indicate a need for
uniform governing criteria,
Realizing the need to codify and progressively develop rules
relating to the protection and preservation of underwater
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
cultural heritage in conformity with international law and
practice, including the UNESCO Convention on the Means
of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and
Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property of 14 November
1970, the UNESCO Convention for the Protection of the
World Cultural and Natural Heritage of 16 November 1972
and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of
10 December 1982,
Committed to improving the effectiveness of measures at
international, regional and national levels for the preservation
in situ or, if necessary for scientiic or protective purposes,
the careful recovery of underwater cultural heritage,
Having decided at its twenty-ninth session that this question
should be made the subject of an international convention,
Adopts this second day of November 2001 this Convention.
Article 1 – Deinitions
For the purposes of this Convention:
1. (a) “Underwater cultural heritage” means all traces
of human existence having a cultural, historical or
archaeological character which have been partially or
totally under water, periodically or continuously, for
at least 100 years such as:
(i) sites, structures, buildings, artefacts and human
remains, together with their archaeological and
natural context;
(ii) vessels, aircraft, other vehicles or any part thereof,
their cargo or other contents, together with their
archaeological and natural context; and
(iii) objects of prehistoric character.
(b) Pipelines and cables placed on the seabed shall
not be considered as underwater cultural heritage.
(c) Installations other than pipelines and cables,
placed on the seabed and still in use, shall not be
considered as underwater cultural heritage.
2. (a) “States Parties” means States which have consented to
be bound by this Convention and for which this Convention
is in force.
(b) This Convention applies mutatis mutandis to those
territories referred to in Article 26, paragraph 2(b), which
become Parties to this Convention in accordance with the
conditions set out in that paragraph, and to that extent
“States Parties” refers to those territories.
3. “UNESCO” means the United Nations Educational,
Scientiic and Cultural Organization.
4. “Director-General” means the Director-General of
UNESCO.
5. “Area” means the seabed and ocean loor and subsoil
thereof, beyond the limits of national jurisdiction.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
6. “Activities directed at underwater cultural heritage” means
activities having underwater cultural heritage as their primary
object and which may, directly or indirectly, physically
disturb or otherwise damage underwater cultural heritage.
7. “Activities incidentally affecting underwater cultural
heritage” means activities which, despite not having
underwater cultural heritage as their primary object or one
of their objects, may physically disturb or otherwise damage
underwater cultural heritage.
8. “State vessels and aircraft” means warships, and other
vessels or aircraft that were owned or operated by a State
and used, at the time of sinking, only for government noncommercial purposes, that are identiied as such and that
meet the deinition of underwater cultural heritage.
9. “Rules” means the Rules concerning activities directed at
underwater cultural heritage, as referred to in Article 33 of
this Convention.
Article 2 – Objectives and general principles
1.This Convention aims to ensure and strengthen the
protection of underwater cultural heritage.
2. States Parties shall cooperate in the protection of underwater
cultural heritage.
3. States Parties shall preserve underwater cultural heritage
for the beneit of humanity in conformity with the provisions
of this Convention.
4. States Parties shall, individually or jointly as appropriate,
take all appropriate measures in conformity with this
Convention and with international law that are necessary to
protect underwater cultural heritage, using for this purpose
the best practicable means at their disposal and in accordance
with their capabilities.
5. The preservation in situ of underwater cultural heritage
shall be considered as the irst option before allowing or
engaging in any activities directed at this heritage.
6. Recovered underwater cultural heritage shall be deposited,
conserved and managed in a manner that ensures its longterm preservation.
7. Underwater cultural heritage shall not be commercially
exploited.
8. Consistent with State practice and international law,
including the United Nations Convention on the Law of
the Sea, nothing in this Convention shall be interpreted as
modifying the rules of international law and State practice
pertaining to sovereign immunities, nor any State’s rights
with respect to its State vessels and aircraft.
UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage
11. No act or activity undertaken on the basis of this Convention
shall constitute grounds for claiming, contending or disputing
any claim to national sovereignty or jurisdiction.
Article 3 – Relationship between this Convention
and the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea
Nothing in this Convention shall prejudice the rights,
jurisdiction and duties of States under international law,
including the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea. This Convention shall be interpreted and applied in the
context of and in a manner consistent with international law,
including the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea.
Article 4 – Relationship to law of salvage and law of
inds
Any activity relating to underwater cultural heritage to which
this Convention applies shall not be subject to the law of
salvage or law of inds, unless it:
(a) is authorized by the competent authorities, and
(b) is in full conformity with this Convention, and
(c) ensures that any recovery of the underwater cultural
heritage achieves its maximum protection.
Article 5 – Activities incidentally affecting underwater
cultural heritage
Each State Party shall use the best practicable means at
its disposal to prevent or mitigate any adverse effects that
might arise from activities under its jurisdiction incidentally
affecting underwater cultural heritage.
Article 6 – Bilateral, regional or other multilateral
agreements
1. States Parties are encouraged to enter into bilateral,
regional or other multilateral agreements or develop existing
agreements, for the preservation of underwater cultural
heritage. All such agreements shall be in full conformity
with the provisions of this Convention and shall not dilute
its universal character. States may, in such agreements, adopt
rules and regulations which would ensure better protection
of underwater cultural heritage than those adopted in this
Convention.
2. The Parties to such bilateral, regional or other multilateral
agreements may invite States with a veriiable link, especially
a cultural, historical or archaeological link, to the underwater
cultural heritage concerned to join such agreements.
9. States Parties shall ensure that proper respect is given to all
human remains located in maritime waters.
3. This Convention shall not alter the rights and obligations
of States Parties regarding the protection of sunken vessels,
arising from other bilateral, regional or other multilateral
agreements concluded before its adoption, and, in particular,
those that are in conformity with the purposes of this
Convention.
10. Responsible non-intrusive access to observe or document
in situ underwater cultural heritage shall be encouraged to
create public awareness, appreciation, and protection of the
heritage except where such access is incompatible with its
protection and management.
Article 7 – Underwater cultural heritage in internal
waters, archipelagic waters and territorial sea
1. States Parties, in the exercise of their sovereignty, have the
exclusive right to regulate and authorize activities directed
at underwater cultural heritage in their internal waters,
UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage
archipelagic waters and territorial sea.
2. Without prejudice to other international agreements
and rules of international law regarding the protection of
underwater cultural heritage, States Parties shall require
that the Rules be applied to activities directed at underwater
cultural heritage in their internal waters, archipelagic waters
and territorial sea.
3. Within their archipelagic waters and territorial sea, in
the exercise of their sovereignty and in recognition of
general practice among States, States Parties, with a view
to cooperating on the best methods of protecting State
vessels and aircraft, should inform the lag State Party to this
Convention and, if applicable, other States with a veriiable
link, especially a cultural, historical or archaeological link,
with respect to the discovery of such identiiable State vessels
and aircraft.
Article 8 – Underwater cultural heritage in the contiguous
zone
Without prejudice to and in addition to Articles 9 and 10, and
in accordance with Article 303, paragraph 2, of the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, States Parties
may regulate and authorize activities directed at underwater
cultural heritage within their contiguous zone. In so doing,
they shall require that the Rules be applied.
Article 9 – Reporting and notiication in the exclusive
economic zone and on the continental shelf
1. All States Parties have a responsibility to protect underwater
cultural heritage in the exclusive economic zone and on the
continental shelf in conformity with this Convention.
Accordingly:
(a) a State Party shall require that when its national, or
a vessel lying its lag, discovers or intends to engage in
activities directed at underwater cultural heritage located
in its exclusive economic zone or on its continental shelf,
the national or the master of the vessel shall report such
discovery or activity to it;
(b) in the exclusive economic zone or on the continental
shelf of another State Party:
(i) States Parties shall require the national or the master
of the vessel to report such discovery or activity to
them and to that other State Party;
(ii) alternatively, a State Party shall require the national
or master of the vessel to report such discovery or
activity to it and shall ensure the rapid and effective
transmission of such reports to all other States
Parties.
2. On depositing its instrument of ratiication, acceptance,
approval or accession, a State Party shall declare the manner
in which reports will be transmitted under paragraph 1(b) of
this Article.
3. A State Party shall notify the Director-General of
discoveries or activities reported to it under paragraph 1 of
this Article.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
4. The Director-General shall promptly make available to
all States Parties any information notiied to him under
paragraph 3 of this Article.
5. Any State Party may declare to the State Party in whose
exclusive economic zone or on whose continental shelf the
underwater cultural heritage is located its interest in being
consulted on how to ensure the effective protection of that
underwater cultural heritage. Such declaration shall be
based on a veriiable link, especially a cultural, historical
or archaeological link, to the underwater cultural heritage
concerned
Article 10 – Protection of underwater cultural heritage
in the exclusive economic zone and on the continental
shelf
1. No authorization shall be granted for an activity directed
at underwater cultural heritage located in the exclusive
economic zone or on the continental shelf except in
conformity with the provisions of this Article.
2. A State Party in whose exclusive economic zone or on whose
continental shelf underwater cultural heritage is located has
the right to prohibit or authorize any activity directed at such
heritage to prevent interference with its sovereign rights or
jurisdiction as provided for by international law including
the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
3. Where there is a discovery of underwater cultural heritage
or it is intended that activity shall be directed at underwater
cultural heritage in a State Party’s exclusive economic zone
or on its continental shelf, that State Party shall:
(a) consult all other States Parties which have declared
an interest under Article 9, paragraph 5, on how best to
protect the underwater cultural heritage;
(b) coordinate such consultations as “Coordinating State”,
unless it expressly declares that it does not wish to do
so, in which case the States Parties which have declared
an interest under Article 9, paragraph 5, shall appoint a
Coordinating State.
4. Without prejudice to the duty of all States Parties
to protect underwater cultural heritage by way of all
practicable measures taken in accordance with international
law to prevent immediate danger to the underwater cultural
heritage, including looting, the Coordinating State may
take all practicable measures, and/or issue any necessary
authorizations in conformity with this Convention and, if
necessary prior to consultations, to prevent any immediate
danger to the underwater cultural heritage, whether arising
from human activities or any other cause, including looting.
In taking such measures assistance may be requested from
other States Parties.
5. The Coordinating State:
(a) shall implement measures of protection which have
been agreed by the consulting States, which include the
Coordinating State, unless the consulting States, which
include the Coordinating State, agree that another State
Party shall implement those measures;
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
(b) shall issue all necessary authorizations for such agreed
measures in conformity with the Rules, unless the consulting
States, which include the Coordinating State, agree that
another State Party shall issue those authorizations;
(c) may conduct any necessary preliminary research on the
underwater cultural heritage and shall issue all necessary
authorizations therefor, and shall promptly inform the
Director-General of the results, who in turn will make such
information promptly available to other States Parties.
6. In coordinating consultations, taking measures, conducting
preliminary research and/or issuing authorizations pursuant
to this Article, the Coordinating State shall act on behalf
of the States Parties as a whole and not in its own interest.
Any such action shall not in itself constitute a basis for
the assertion of any preferential or jurisdictional rights
not provided for in international law, including the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
7. Subject to the provisions of paragraphs 2 and 4 of this
Article, no activity directed at State vessels and aircraft shall
be conducted without the agreement of the lag State and the
collaboration of the Coordinating State.
Article 11 – Reporting and notiication in the Area
1. States Parties have a responsibility to protect underwater
cultural heritage in the Area in conformity with this Convention
and Article 149 of the United Nations Convention on the Law
of the Sea. Accordingly when a national, or a vessel lying
the lag of a State Party, discovers or intends to engage in
activities directed at underwater cultural heritage located in the
Area, that State Party shall require its national, or the master of
the vessel, to report such discovery or activity to it.
UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage
3. All States Parties may take all practicable measures
in conformity with this Convention, if necessary prior
to consultations, to prevent any immediate danger to the
underwater cultural heritage, whether arising from human
activity or any other cause including looting.
4. The Coordinating State shall:
(a) implement measures of protection which have been
agreed by the consulting States, which include the
Coordinating State, unless the consulting States, which
include the Coordinating State, agree that another State
Party shall implement those measures; and
(b) issue all necessary authorizations for such agreed
measures, in conformity with this Convention, unless
the consulting States, which include the Coordinating
State, agree that another State Party shall issue those
authorizations.
5. The Coordinating State may conduct any necessary
preliminary research on the underwater cultural heritage and
shall issue all necessary authorizations therefor, and shall
promptly inform the Director-General of the results, who in
turn shall make such information available to other States
Parties.
6. In coordinating consultations, taking measures, conducting
preliminary research, and/or issuing authorizations pursuant
to this Article, the Coordinating State shall act for the beneit
of humanity as a whole, on behalf of all States Parties.
Particular regard shall be paid to the preferential rights of
States of cultural, historical or archaeological origin in respect
of the underwater cultural heritage concerned.
2. States Parties shall notify the Director-General and the
Secretary-General of the International Seabed Authority of
such discoveries or activities reported to them.
7. No State Party shall undertake or authorize activities
directed at State vessels and aircraft in the Area without the
consent of the lag State.
3. The Director-General shall promptly make available to all
States Parties any such information supplied by States Parties.
4. Any State Party may declare to the Director-General
its interest in being consulted on how to ensure the
effective protection of that underwater cultural heritage.
Such declaration shall be based on a veriiable link to the
underwater cultural heritage concerned, particular regard
being paid to the preferential rights of States of cultural,
historical or archaeological origin.
Article 12 – Protection of underwater cultural heritage
in the Area
1. No authorization shall be granted for any activity directed
at underwater cultural heritage located in the Area except in
conformity with the provisions of this Article.
Article 13 – Sovereign immunity
Warships and other government ships or military aircraft
with sovereign immunity, operated for non-commercial
purposes, undertaking their normal mode of operations,
and not engaged in activities directed at underwater cultural
heritage, shall not be obliged to report discoveries of
underwater cultural heritage under Articles 9, 10, 11 and
12 of this Convention. However States Parties shall ensure,
by the adoption of appropriate measures not impairing the
operations or operational capabilities of their warships or
other government ships or military aircraft with sovereign
immunity operated for non-commercial purposes, that they
comply, as far as is reasonable and practicable, with Articles
9, 10, 11 and 12 of this Convention.
2. The Director-General shall invite all States Parties which
have declared an interest under Article 11, paragraph 4, to
consult on how best to protect the underwater cultural heritage,
and to appoint a State Party to coordinate such consultations
as the “Coordinating State”. The Director-General shall also
invite the International Seabed Authority to participate in
such consultations.
Article 14 – Control of entry into the territory, dealing
and possession
States Parties shall take measures to prevent the entry into
their territory, the dealing in, or the possession of, underwater
cultural heritage illicitly exported and/or recovered, where
recovery was contrary to this Convention.
100 UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage
Article 15 – Non-use of areas under the jurisdiction of
States Parties
States Parties shall take measures to prohibit the use of their
territory, including their maritime ports, as well as artiicial
islands, installations and structures under their exclusive
jurisdiction or control, in support of any activity directed at
underwater cultural heritage which is not in conformity with
this Convention.
Article 16 – Measures relating to nationals and vessels
States Parties shall take all practicable measures to ensure
that their nationals and vessels lying their lag do not engage
in any activity directed at underwater cultural heritage in a
manner not in conformity with this Convention.
Article 17 – Sanctions
1. Each State Party shall impose sanctions for violations of
measures it has taken to implement this Convention.
2. Sanctions applicable in respect of violations shall be
adequate in severity to be effective in securing compliance
with this Convention and to discourage violations wherever
they occur and shall deprive offenders of the beneit deriving
from their illegal activities.
3. States Parties shall cooperate to ensure enforcement of
sanctions imposed under this Article.
Article 18 – Seizure and disposition of underwater cultural
heritage
1. Each State Party shall take measures providing for the
seizure of underwater cultural heritage in its territory that
has been recovered in a manner not in conformity with this
Convention.
2. Each State Party shall record, protect and take all reasonable
measures to stabilize underwater cultural heritage seized
under this Convention.
3. Each State Party shall notify the Director-General and
any other State with a veriiable link, especially a cultural,
historical or archaeological link, to the underwater cultural
heritage concerned of any seizure of underwater cultural
heritage that it has made under this Convention.
4. A State Party which has seized underwater cultural heritage
shall ensure that its disposition be for the public beneit, taking
into account the need for conservation and research; the need
for reassembly of a dispersed collection; the need for public
access, exhibition and education; and the interests of any
State with a veriiable link, especially a cultural, historical
or archaeological link, in respect of the underwater cultural
heritage concerned.
Article 19 – Cooperation and information-sharing
1. States Parties shall cooperate and assist each other in the
protection and management of underwater cultural heritage
under this Convention, including, where practicable,
collaborating in the investigation, excavation, documentation,
conservation, study and presentation of such heritage.
2. To the extent compatible with the purposes of this
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Convention, each State Party undertakes to share information
with other States Parties concerning underwater cultural
heritage, including discovery of heritage, location of
heritage, heritage excavated or recovered contrary to this
Convention or otherwise in violation of international law,
pertinent scientiic methodology and technology, and legal
developments relating to such heritage.
3. Information shared between States Parties, or between
UNESCO and States Parties, regarding the discovery or
location of underwater cultural heritage shall, to the extent
compatible with their national legislation, be kept conidential
and reserved to competent authorities of States Parties as
long as the disclosure of such information might endanger
or otherwise put at risk the preservation of such underwater
cultural heritage.
4. Each State Party shall take all practicable measures to
disseminate information, including where feasible through
appropriate international databases, about underwater cultural
heritage excavated or recovered contrary to this Convention
or otherwise in violation of international law.
Article 20 – Public awareness
Each State Party shall take all practicable measures to raise
public awareness regarding the value and signiicance of
underwater cultural heritage and the importance of protecting
it under this Convention.
Article 21 – Training in underwater archaeology
States Parties shall cooperate in the provision of training in
underwater archaeology, in techniques for the conservation
of underwater cultural heritage and, on agreed terms, in
the transfer of technology relating to underwater cultural
heritage.
Article 22 – Competent authorities
1. In order to ensure the proper implementation of this
Convention, States Parties shall establish competent
authorities or reinforce the existing ones where appropriate,
with the aim of providing for the establishment, maintenance
and updating of an inventory of underwater cultural heritage,
the effective protection, conservation, presentation and
management of underwater cultural heritage, as well as
research and education.
2. States Parties shall communicate to the Director-General
the names and addresses of their competent authorities
relating to underwater cultural heritage.
Article 23 – Meetings of States Parties
1. The Director-General shall convene a Meeting of States
Parties within one year of the entry into force of this
Convention and thereafter at least once every two years.
At the request of a majority of States Parties, the DirectorGeneral shall convene an Extraordinary Meeting of States
Parties.
2. The Meeting of States Parties shall decide on its functions
and responsibilities.
3. The Meeting of States Parties shall adopt its own Rules of
Procedure.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage 101
4.The Meeting of States Parties may establish a Scientiic and
Technical Advisory Body composed of experts nominated by
the States Parties with due regard to the principle of equitable
geographical distribution and the desirability of a gender
balance.
Annexes V and VII of the United Nations Convention on
the Law of the Sea, such State shall be entitled to nominate
conciliators and arbitrators to be included in the lists referred
to in Annex V, Article 2, and Annex VII, Article 2, for the
settlement of disputes arising out of this Convention.
5.The Scientiic and Technical Advisory Body shall
appropriately assist the Meeting of States Parties in questions
of a scientiic or technical nature regarding the implementation
of the Rules.
Article 26 – Ratiication, acceptance, approval or
accession
1. This Convention shall be subject to ratiication, acceptance
or approval by Member States of UNESCO.
Article 24 – Secretariat for this Convention
1. The Director-General shall be responsible for the functions
of the Secretariat for this Convention.
2. This Convention shall be subject to accession:
2. The duties of the Secretariat shall include:
(a) organizing Meetings of States Parties as provided for in
Article 23, paragraph 1; and
(b) assisting States Parties in implementing the decisions
of the Meetings of States Parties.
Article 25 – Peaceful settlement of disputes
1. Any dispute between two or more States Parties concerning
the interpretation or application of this Convention shall be
subject to negotiations in good faith or other peaceful means
of settlement of their own choice.
2. If those negotiations do not settle the dispute within a
reasonable period of time, it may be submitted to UNESCO
for mediation, by agreement between the States Parties
concerned.
3. If mediation is not undertaken or if there is no settlement
by mediation, the provisions relating to the settlement of
disputes set out in Part XV of the United Nations Convention
on the Law of the Sea apply mutatis mutandis to any dispute
between States Parties to this Convention concerning the
interpretation or application of this Convention, whether or
not they are also Parties to the United Nations Convention on
the Law of the Sea.
4. Any procedure chosen by a State Party to this Convention
and to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the
Sea pursuant to Article 287 of the latter shall apply to the
settlement of disputes under this Article, unless that State
Party, when ratifying, accepting, approving or acceding to
this Convention, or at any time thereafter, chooses another
procedure pursuant to Article 287 for the purpose of the
settlement of disputes arising out of this Convention.
5. A State Party to this Convention which is not a Party to
the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, when
ratifying, accepting, approving or acceding to this Convention
or at any time thereafter shall be free to choose, by means of
a written declaration, one or more of the means set out in
Article 287, paragraph 1, of the United Nations Convention
on the Law of the Sea for the purpose of settlement of
disputes under this Article. Article 287 shall apply to such a
declaration, as well as to any dispute to which such State is
party, which is not covered by a declaration in force. For the
purpose of conciliation and arbitration, in accordance with
(a) by States that are not members of UNESCO but are
members of the United Nations or of a specialized agency
within the United Nations system or of the International
Atomic Energy Agency, as well as by States Parties to the
Statute of the International Court of Justice and any other
State invited to accede to this Convention by the General
Conference of UNESCO;
(b) by territories which enjoy full internal self-government,
recognized as such by the United Nations, but have not
attained full independence in accordance with General
Assembly resolution 1514 (XV) and which have
competence over the matters governed by this Convention,
including the competence to enter into treaties in respect of
those matters.
3. The instruments of ratiication, acceptance, approval or
accession shall be deposited with the Director-General.
Article 27 – Entry into force
This Convention shall enter into force three months after
the date of the deposit of the twentieth instrument referred
to in Article 26, but solely with respect to the twenty States
or territories that have so deposited their instruments. It shall
enter into force for each other State or territory three months
after the date on which that State or territory has deposited
its instrument.
Article 28 – Declaration as to inland waters
When ratifying, accepting, approving or acceding to this
Convention or at any time thereafter, any State or territory
may declare that the Rules shall apply to inland waters not of
a maritime character.
Article 29 – Limitations to geographical scope
At the time of ratifying, accepting, approving or acceding to
this Convention, a State or territory may make a declaration
to the depositary that this Convention shall not be applicable
to speciic parts of its territory, internal waters, archipelagic
waters or territorial sea, and shall identify therein the reasons
for such declaration. Such State shall, to the extent practicable
and as quickly as possible, promote conditions under which
this Convention will apply to the areas speciied in its
declaration, and to that end shall also withdraw its declaration
in whole or in part as soon as that has been achieved.
Article 30 – Reservations
With the exception of Article 29, no reservations may be
made to this Convention.
10 UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage
Article 31 – Amendments
1. A State Party may, by written communication addressed to
the Director-General, propose amendments to this Convention.
The Director-General shall circulate such communication to
all States Parties. If, within six months from the date of the
circulation of the communication, not less than one half of the
States Parties reply favourably to the request, the DirectorGeneral shall present such proposal to the next Meeting of
States Parties for discussion and possible adoption.
2. Amendments shall be adopted by a two-thirds majority of
States Parties present and voting.
3. Once adopted, amendments to this Convention shall be
subject to ratiication, acceptance, approval or accession by
the States Parties.
4. Amendments shall enter into force, but solely with respect
to the States Parties that have ratiied, accepted, approved
or acceded to them, three months after the deposit of the
instruments referred to in paragraph 3 of this Article by
two thirds of the States Parties. Thereafter, for each State
or territory that ratiies, accepts, approves or accedes to it,
the amendment shall enter into force three months after the
date of deposit by that Party of its instrument of ratiication,
acceptance, approval or accession.
5. A State or territory which becomes a Party to this Convention
after the entry into force of amendments in conformity with
paragraph 4 of this Article shall, failing an expression of
different intention by that State or territory, be considered:
(a) as a Party to this Convention as so amended; and
(b) as a Party to the unamended Convention in relation to
any State Party not bound by the amendment.
Article 32 – Denunciation
1. A State Party may, by written notiication addressed to the
Director-General, denounce this Convention.
2. The denunciation shall take effect twelve months after
the date of receipt of the notiication, unless the notiication
speciies a later date.
3. The denunciation shall not in any way affect the duty
of any State Party to fulil any obligation embodied in this
Convention to which it would be subject under international
law independently of this Convention.
Article 33 – The Rules
The Rules annexed to this Convention form an integral part
of it and, unless expressly provided otherwise, a reference to
this Convention includes a reference to the Rules.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
Annex
Rules concerning activities directed at underwater
cultural heritage
I. General principles
Rule 1. The protection of underwater cultural heritage
through in situ preservation shall be considered as the irst
option. Accordingly, activities directed at underwater cultural
heritage shall be authorized in a manner consistent with the
protection of that heritage, and subject to that requirement
may be authorized for the purpose of making a signiicant
contribution to protection or knowledge or enhancement of
underwater cultural heritage.
Rule 2. The commercial exploitation of underwater cultural
heritage for trade or speculation or its irretrievable dispersal
is fundamentally incompatible with the protection and proper
management of underwater cultural heritage. Underwater
cultural heritage shall not be traded, sold, bought or bartered
as commercial goods.
This Rule cannot be interpreted as preventing:
(a) the provision of professional archaeological services
or necessary services incidental thereto whose nature and
purpose are in full conformity with this Convention and are
subject to the authorization of the competent authorities;
(b) the deposition of underwater cultural heritage,
recovered in the course of a research project in conformity
with this Convention, provided such deposition does not
prejudice the scientiic or cultural interest or integrity of the
recovered material or result in its irretrievable dispersal; is
in accordance with the provisions of Rules 33 and 34; and is
subject to the authorization of the competent authorities.
Rule 3. Activities directed at underwater cultural heritage
shall not adversely affect the underwater cultural heritage
more than is necessary for the objectives of the project.
Rule 4. Activities directed at underwater cultural heritage
must use non-destructive techniques and survey methods in
preference to recovery of objects. If excavation or recovery
is necessary for the purpose of scientiic studies or for the
ultimate protection of the underwater cultural heritage, the
methods and techniques used must be as non-destructive as
possible and contribute to the preservation of the remains.
Rule 5. Activities directed at underwater cultural heritage
shall avoid the unnecessary disturbance of human remains or
venerated sites.
Rule 6. Activities directed at underwater cultural heritage
shall be strictly regulated to ensure proper recording of
cultural, historical and archaeological information.
Article 34 – Registration with the United Nations
In conformity with Article 102 of the Charter of the
United Nations, this Convention shall be registered with
the Secretariat of the United Nations at the request of the
Director-General.
Rule 7. Public access to in situ underwater cultural heritage
shall be promoted, except where such access is incompatible
with protection and management.
Article 35 – Authoritative texts
This Convention has been drawn up in Arabic, Chinese,
English, French, Russian and Spanish, the six texts being
equally authoritative.
Rule 8. International cooperation in the conduct of activities
directed at underwater cultural heritage shall be encouraged in
order to further the effective exchange or use of archaeologists
and other relevant professionals.
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
II. Project design
Rule 9. Prior to any activity directed at underwater cultural
heritage, a project design for the activity shall be developed
and submitted to the competent authorities for authorization
and appropriate peer review.
Rule 10. The project design shall include:
(a) an evaluation of previous or preliminary studies;
(b) the project statement and objectives;
(c) the methodology to be used and the techniques to be
employed;
(d) the anticipated funding;
(e) an expected timetable for completion of the project;
(f) the composition of the team and the qualiications,
responsibilities and experience of each team member;
(g) plans for post-ieldwork analysis and other activities;
(h) a conservation programme for artefacts and the site in
close cooperation with the competent authorities;
(i) a site management and maintenance policy for the whole
duration of the project;
(j) a documentation programme;
(k) a safety policy;
(l) an environmental policy;
(m) arrangements for collaboration with museums and
other institutions, in particular scientiic institutions;
(n) report preparation;
(o) deposition of archives, including underwater cultural
heritage removed; and
(p) a programme for publication.
Rule 11. Activities directed at underwater cultural heritage
shall be carried out in accordance with the project design
approved by the competent authorities.
Rule 12. Where unexpected discoveries are made or
circumstances change, the project design shall be reviewed
and amended with the approval of the competent authorities.
Rule 13. In cases of urgency or chance discoveries, activities
directed at the underwater cultural heritage, including
conservation measures or activities for a period of short
duration, in particular site stabilization, may be authorized
in the absence of a project design in order to protect the
underwater cultural heritage.
III. Preliminary work
Rule 14. The preliminary work referred to in Rule 10 (a)
shall include an assessment that evaluates the signiicance
and vulnerability of the underwater cultural heritage and the
surrounding natural environment to damage by the proposed
project, and the potential to obtain data that would meet the
project objectives.
Rule 15. The assessment shall also include background
studies of available historical and archaeological evidence,
the archaeological and environmental characteristics of the
site, and the consequences of any potential intrusion for
UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage 10
the long-term stability of the underwater cultural heritage
affected by the activities.
IV. Project objective, methodology and techniques
Rule 16. The methodology shall comply with the project
objectives, and the techniques employed shall be as nonintrusive as possible.
V. Funding
Rule 17. Except in cases of emergency to protect underwater
cultural heritage, an adequate funding base shall be assured
in advance of any activity, suficient to complete all stages
of the project design, including conservation, documentation
and curation of recovered artefacts, and report preparation
and dissemination.
Rule 18. The project design shall demonstrate an ability,
such as by securing a bond, to fund the project through to
completion.
Rule 19. The project design shall include a contingency plan
that will ensure conservation of underwater cultural heritage
and supporting documentation in the event of any interruption
of anticipated funding.
VI. Project duration - timetable
Rule 20. An adequate timetable shall be developed to
assure in advance of any activity directed at underwater
cultural heritage the completion of all stages of the project
design, including conservation, documentation and curation
of recovered underwater cultural heritage, as well as report
preparation and dissemination.
Rule 21. The project design shall include a contingency plan
that will ensure conservation of underwater cultural heritage
and supporting documentation in the event of any interruption
or termination of the project.
VII. Competence and qualiications
Rule 22. Activities directed at underwater cultural heritage
shall only be undertaken under the direction and control
of, and in the regular presence of, a qualiied underwater
archaeologist with scientiic competence appropriate to the
project.
Rule 23. All persons on the project team shall be qualiied
and have demonstrated competence appropriate to their roles
in the project.
VIII. Conservation and site management
Rule 24. The conservation programme shall provide for the
treatment of the archaeological remains during the activities
directed at underwater cultural heritage, during transit and in
the long term. Conservation shall be carried out in accordance
with current professional standards.
Rule 25. The site management programme shall provide for
the protection and management in situ of underwater cultural
heritage, in the course of and upon termination of ieldwork.
The programme shall include public information, reasonable
provision for site stabilization, monitoring, and protection
against interference.
10 UNESCO Convention on the Underwater Cultural Heritage
IX. Documentation
Rule 26. The documentation programme shall set out thorough
documentation including a progress report of activities directed
at underwater cultural heritage, in accordance with current
professional standards of archaeological documentation.
Rule 27. Documentation shall include, at a minimum, a
comprehensive record of the site, including the provenance of
underwater cultural heritage moved or removed in the course
of the activities directed at underwater cultural heritage,
ield notes, plans, drawings, sections, and photographs or
recording in other media.
X. Safety
Rule 28. A safety policy shall be prepared that is adequate
to ensure the safety and health of the project team and third
parties and that is in conformity with any applicable statutory
and professional requirements.
XI. Environment
Rule 29. An environmental policy shall be prepared that is
adequate to ensure that the seabed and marine life are not
unduly disturbed.
XII. Reporting
Rule 30. Interim and inal reports shall be made available
according to the timetable set out in the project design, and
deposited in relevant public records.
Rule 31. Reports shall include:
(a) an account of the objectives;
(b) an account of the methods and techniques employed;
(c) an account of the results achieved;
(d) basic graphic and photographic documentation on all
phases of the activity;
(e) recommendations concerning conservation and curation
of the site and of any underwater cultural heritage
removed; and
(f) recommendations for future activities.
XIII. Curation of project archives
Rule 32. Arrangements for curation of the project archives
Underwater Cultural Heritage at Risk
shall be agreed to before any activity commences, and shall
be set out in the project design.
Rule 33. The project archives, including any underwater
cultural heritage removed and a copy of all supporting
documentation shall, as far as possible, be kept together
and intact as a collection in a manner that is available for
professional and public access as well as for the curation of
the archives. This should be done as rapidly as possible and
in any case not later than ten years from the completion of the
project, in so far as may be compatible with conservation of
the underwater cultural heritage.
Rule 34. The project archives shall be managed according
to international professional standards, and subject to the
authorization of the competent authorities.
XIV. Dissemination
Rule 35. Projects shall provide for public education
and popular presentation of the project results where
appropriate.
Rule 36. A inal synthesis of a project shall be:
(a) made public as soon as possible, having regard to the
complexity of the project and the conidential or sensitive
nature of the information; and
(b) deposited in relevant public records.
The foregoing is the authentic text of the Convention duly
adopted by the General Conference of the United Nations
Educational, Scientiic and Cultural Organization during
its thirty-irst session, which was held in Paris and declared
closed the third day of November 2001.
Done in Paris this 6th day of November 2001 in two authentic
copies bearing the signature of the President of the thirtyirst session of the General Conference and of the DirectorGeneral of the United Nations Educational, Scientiic and
Cultural Organization, which shall be deposited in the
archives of the United Nations Educational, Scientiic and
Cultural Organization and certiied true copies of which shall
be delivered to all the States and territories referred to in
Article 26 as well as to the United Nations.
Contact Information
ICOMOS
UNESCO
ICOM
ICCROM
International Council on Monuments and Sites
Conseil International des monuments et des sites
49-51, rue de la Fédération
75015 Paris – France
Tel: 33 (0) 1 45 67 67 70
Fax: 33 (0) 1 45 66 06 22
e-mail: secretariat@icomos.org
http://www.international.icomos.org
International Council of Museums
Maison de l’UNESCO
1, rue Miollis
75732 Paris Cedex 15 – France
Tel: 33 (0) 1 47 34 05 00
Fax: 33 (0) 1 43 06 78 62
e-mail: secretariat@icom.museum
http://www.icom.org
DOCOMOMO
International Working Party for Documentation and
Conservation of Buildings, Sites, and Neighborhoods of the
Modern Movement
International Secretariat
Chair: Maristella Casciato
Cité de l’architecture et du patrimoine
Palais de Chaillot
1, place du Trocadéro
75016 Paris – France
e-mail: cascima@uniroma2.it
http://www.docomomo.com
TICCIH
The International Committee for the Conservation of the
Industrial Heritage
Secretary: Stuart B. Smith
‘Chygarth,’ 5 Beacon Terrace
CAMBORNE, Cornwall TR14 7BU, UK
Tel/Fax: 44 1 209 612 142
e-mail: stuartbsmith@chygarth.co.uk
http://www.mnactec.com/TICCIH/
United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization
Organisation des Nations Unies pour l’education,
la science et la culture
Division of Cultural Heritage
1, rue Miollis
75732 Paris Cedex 15 – France
Tel: 33 (0) 1 45 68 37 93
Fax: 33 (0) 1 45 68 55 96
http://www.unesco.org
The International Centre for the Study of the Preservation
and Restoration of Cultural Property
Via di San Michele 13
00153 Rome – Italy
Tel: 39 06 58 55 31
Fax: 39 06 58 55 33 49
e-mail: iccrom@iccrom.org
http://www.iccrom.org
ICBS
International Committee of the Blue Shield
President: Joan van Albada
C/o The International Council of Archives/
Conseil international des archives
60, rue des Francs-Bourgeois
75003 Paris – France
Tel: 33 1 40 27 63 06
Fax: 33 1 42 72 20 65
e-mail: ica@ica.org
http://www.ila.org/blueshield.htm
ICUCH
Robert Grenier
Parks Canada
1800 Walkey Road
K1A OM5 Ottawa - Canada
Tel: 1 613 993 2125 ex 207
Fax: 1 613 993 9796
e-mail: Robert.Grenie@pc.gc.ca
Heritage at Risk Series:
Heritage at Risk, ICOMOS World Report 2000 on Monuments and Sites in Danger
Munich 2000, K.G. Saur Verlag, ISBN 3-598-24240-9
Heritage at Risk, ICOMOS World Report 2001/2002 on Monuments and Sites in Danger
Munich 2001, K.G. Saur Verlag, ISBN 3-598-24241-7
Heritage at Risk, ICOMOS World Report 2002/2003 on Monuments and Sites in Danger
Munich 2003, K.G. Saur Verlag, ISBN 3-598-24242-5
Heritage at Risk, ICOMOS World Report 2004/2005 on Monuments and Sites in Danger
Munich 2005, K.G. Saur Verlag, ISBN 3-598-24243-3
Online at: http://www.international.icomos.org/risk