Yahoo – AFP,
August 18, 2017
London
(AFP) - Maritime archaeologists said Friday they have begun excavating the
wreck of a Dutch ship that sank off the English coast in 1740, recovering
leather shoes, silver and the bones of its lost crew.
The
Rooswijk, a Dutch East India Company ship, was on its way to what is now
Jakarta when it went down with around 300 people and a large cargo of silver
ingots and coinage aboard.
Following
its discovery in 2005, most of the precious goods were removed, but a full
excavation is now underway due to concerns it could be destroyed by shifting
sands and currents.
Remains of
some of the sailors who perished have been found preserved on the seabed 26
metres (85 feet) down, along with more coins, leather shoes, an oil lamp, glass
bottles, pewter jugs and spoons and ornately carved knife handles.
"It's
a snapshot of a moment in time," said Alison James, a maritime
archaeologist at the Historic England cultural agency, while one her colleagues
said it was like "an underwater Pompeii".
The items
brought ashore for conservation also include wooden seaman's chests which will
be x-rayed to see if they are contain cargo or personal possessions.
James told
AFP it was a remarkable site: "It's incredibly well-preserved, it's a very
early wreck and there's a lot of material on the seabed."
The wreck
is under the legal protection and management of the British government,
although the excavation is led and financed by the Dutch government, which also
owns any finds.
The project
is the largest of its scale on a ship from the Dutch East India Company, which
lost a total of 250 vessels to shipwreck -- of which only a third have been
located.

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