A group of marine
archaeologists kicked off a mission this week to explore an ancient shipwreck
at the bottom of the Aegean Sea — not with a sub, but with a semi-robotic metal
diving suit that looks likes it was taken straight out of a James Bond movie.
Sponge divers first discovered the 2,000-year-old shipwreck off
the Greek island Antikythera in 1900. They recovered fragments of bronze
statues, corroded marble sculptures, gold jewelry and, most famously, the Antikythera mechanism, a clocklike
astronomical calculator sometimes called the world's oldest computer. Teams led
by Jacques Cousteau pulled up more artifacts and even found human remains when
they visited the wreck in the 1950s and 1970s.
But none of those previous expeditions had access to the
Exosuit, a one-of-a-kind diving outfit that weighs 530 lbs. (240 kilograms),
and can plunge to the extraordinary depths of 1,000 feet (305 meters) and stay
underwater for hours without the diver being at risk of decompression sickness.
Brendan Foley, a maritime archaeologist from the Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institute (WHOI) in Massachusetts, is co-director of the 2014
Antikythera mission, in partnership with the Greek Ephorate of Underwater
Antiquities.
"It's likely that sediment will hold the kind of stuff we
can't even imagine," Foley told Live Science back
in June,
when the team was preparing to observe and collect bioluminescent organisms off
the coast of Rhode Island. "Our eyes light up thinking about it. It's the
kind of thing that wakes you up in the middle of the night. These are artifacts
that have never been seen since the time of Caesar."
The Antikythera wreck settled more than 200 feet (60 m)
below the surface during the 1st century B.C., but some of the cargo onboard
dated back to the 4th century B.C. Historians have speculated that the vessel
was carrying loot from Greece to Rome during the era of Julius Caesar.
An Exosuit-clad archaeologist could unearth artifacts that help
scholars learn more about the ship's story. During a preliminary expedition to
the site in 2012, Foley and his colleagues used sonar to detect intriguing
targets at the wreck site, which look like boulders but could be huge statues,
according to WHOI's Oceanus magazine. The team also plans to
explore a second wreck nearby that could have been the Antikythera ship's
traveling companion, as well as the bottom of an undersea cliff — potentially
around 400 feet (120 m) deep — where additional artifacts from the wreck may
have slipped over the years, beyond the reach of divers.
Made by the Canadian company Nuytco Research, the Exosuit
has four 1.6-horsepower thrusters that can propel a diver up, down,
forward, backward, right or left. The Exosuit protects its wearer from
decompression sickness because it maintains the level of air pressure humans
experience at the surface. Without the threat of the bends, a diver can be
pulled up to the surface in just two or three minutes if anything goes wrong.
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