Yahoo – AFP, Gael Branchereau, July 28, 2016
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| Divers exploring the historic royal shipwreck "Kronan" off the south-east coast of Sweden have discovered 340-year-old cheese buried in the sea bed below the wreckage (AFP Photo) |
Stockholm
(AFP) - Divers searching the wreck of a 17th-century Swedish warship on the bed
of the Baltic say they have found de Brie.
Sifting
through the ancient timbers of the Kronan, a ship that sank in 1676 off the
Swedish coast, they found not diamonds as they had hoped... but a cheese.
Inside a
watertight pot was a semi-firm 340-year-old "dairy product" smelling
of yeast and Roquefort cheese, expedition leader Lars Einarsson told AFP on
Thursday.
"Unlike
the others, I find its smell is quite pleasant," he said. "It smells
of life."
The unusual
find is being sent to the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences for
tests.
The Kronan
(Crown) sank off the island of Oeland, southeastern Sweden on June 1, 1676 in a
battle with a Danish-Dutch fleet.
Squabbling
officers and too much sail caused the ship to capsize and then explode. Only
about 40 of the 800 crew survived.
The wreck
was found in 1980 by Anders Franzen, an amateur naval archaeologist who 24
years earlier discovered the warship Vasa, which sank in 1628 in Stockholm port
on its maiden voyage.
The Vasa's
timbers were brought to the surface -- the ship, housed in a maritime museum in
Stockholm, is now one of Sweden's star attractions.
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This
handout picture shows the wreckage of Kronan at the bottom of the Baltic
sea of
the coast of southern Sweden (AFP Photo)
|
But in the
Kronan's case, the blast was so powerful that pieces of the ship were scattered
over a wide area of seabed. Fishing nets, minesweeping and the forces of the
sea have added to the dispersal.
Around 80
percent of the estimated site has been explored, revealing a trove of treasure
and historical artefacts.
Around
30,000 items have been brought to the surface so far, including bronze cannon,
chests, dishes, navigational instruments and a German-made trumpet, as well as
diamonds and gold coins.
Divers have
also found flour, animal bones, liquor and wine — items that are a potential
bonanza for historians eager for insights into how food was made centuries ago.
The cheese
survived thanks to the chill and low salinity of the Baltic and the fact that
it lay under a thick layer of sediment, which protected the pot from corrosion.
In 2010,
divers recovered 145 bottles of vintage Champagne from the wreck of a ship that
sank off the Finnish archipelago of Aland between 1825 and 1830.


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