100,000 finds on deep Chinese shipwrecks

Some of the Chinese pottery lying on Wreck No 1 about 1.5km deep (National Cultural Heritage Administration)
Some of the pottery lying on Wreck No 1 about 1.5km deep (National Cultural Heritage Administration)

More than 100,000 Chinese artefacts, mainly Ming ceramics, from two ships wrecked 500 years ago have been discovered at a depth of 1.5km in the South China Sea – marking the first time China has found deep wrecks on such a scale.

 

The shipwrecks, designated No 1 and No 2, were found at two sites 20km apart on the north-west continental slope off Sanya on Hainan island. No 1 contains the large numbers of ceramics, piled in places 3m deep above the vessel, while the slightly earlier No 2 appears to have been dedicated mainly to importing timber.

Also read: 10,000 ceramics found on ancient Med shipwreck

The discoveries were announced on 21 May by archaeologists from China’s National Cultural Heritage Administration (NCHA). The sites had been found by a team from the Chinese Academy of Sciences’ Insтιтute of Deep-Sea Science & Engineering (IDSSE) last October, and research is now being conducted by some 30 experts from there as well as from the NCHA’s National Centre for Archaeology and the Museum of the South China Sea.

A pots
(NCHA)
A wide ᴀssortment of Ming-era porcelain (National Cultural Heritage Administration)
A wide ᴀssortment of Ming-era ceramics (NCHA)

No 1 wreck is reckoned to lie scattered over a 10,000sq m area. Though the cargo is visible most of the ship is thought to remain buried in sand, awaiting excavation. Analysis of recovered samples indicates that the cargo was being exported and dates to the time of the 11th ruler of the Ming Dynasty, Emperor Zhengde (1506-21).

Blue-and-white porcelain, pieces of celadon pottery, green glazed and other styles of ceramics found at the site originated at two manufacturing centres, in Jingdezhen and Longquan.

Shipwreck No 2 has been dated to the reign of Zhengde’s father Emperor Hongzhi (1488-1505). The number of ceramics on board is far smaller but large numbers of preserved timber logs were found lying at the site.

Timber logs on wreck No 2 (National Cultural Heritage Administration)
Timber logs on wreck No 2 (NCHA)

A series of 50 manned submersible dives is planned at the sites over the next 12 months, carried out using the Shenhai Yongshi (Deep Sea Warrior) and Fendouzhe (Striver) vehicles from the scientific research vessels Tansuo 1 and Tansuo 2. Once the surveys are complete an excavation and conservation programme is to be planned for the two wrecks.

“The findings are key evidence of the ancient Maritime Silk Road, and a major breakthrough for historical study in Chinese overseas trade, navigation and porcelain,” said NCHA director Yan Yalin. “China will promote international co-operation in protecting underwater cultural relics and share its experiences.”

Discovery of both inbound and outbound ships in the same area “demonstrates the significance of the route”, added NCA director Tang Wei. “It helps us study the Maritime Silk Road’s reciprocal flow.”

Deepwater archaeological exploration of deep Chinese waters is said by China Daily to have been a recent initiative, with the NCA and IDSSE together setting up a dedicated laboratory in 2018. They were rewarded when they found artefacts, including coins, dating from the Tang Dynasty (618-907) at depths beyond 2km near the Paracel Islands, a disputed area of the South China Sea.

Related Posts

Giants Beneath the Earth: Archaeology, Myth, and the Legacy of the Colossal

In the depths of the earth, where layers of soil guard the remnants of forgotten lives, archaeologists occasionally uncover graves that defy expectations. Some reveal skeletons of…

The Dragon’s Spine: Geology, Myth, and the Human Imagination

High in the remote mountain ranges of Asia, where the ridges cut the sky like jagged teeth and the winds carve the stone into strange shapes, lies…

The Gibbet: Death, Deterrence, and the Spectacle of Justice

In the dark annals of early modern European justice, few symbols stand as chillingly powerful as the gibbet, also known as the hanging cage. More than a…

Fossils, Myths, and Memory: The Rhinoceros Bone of Mycenae

The archaeological site of Mycenae, perched on a rocky hill in the northeastern Peloponnese of Greece, has long captured the imagination as the seat of Agamemnon, leader…

Guardians of Smoke: The Dani Mummies of Papua

In the remote highlands of Papua, Indonesia, where mist clings to mountain slopes and dense forests hide centuries of tradition, lies one of the world’s most extraordinary…

Silent Testimonies: Pre-Inca Burials and the Preservation of Memory

Beneath the arid soils of Peru’s coastal valleys, archaeologists continue to uncover remarkable remnants of cultures that flourished long before the rise of the Inca Empire. The…