The Ministry of Culture and Sports announced that submerged archaeological evidence in the area and urban center of ancient Oloundas, today’s Elounda on Crete, has been investigated by an underwater research team from the Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities and a team of geophysicists from the Laboratory of Satellite Remote Sensing of the Institute of Mediterreanean Studies. The research, conducted last October in much of Elounda Bay, involved volunteer divers and scientists of other specialties. This is the third research season in the five year project of the two bodies launched in 2017 and supported by the Municipality of Agios Nikolaos.
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| View of the submerged structures in the Vathi Bay of the Kolokytha peninsula [Credit: Greek Ministry of Culture] |
The research is twofold: the underwater overview of the coasts of Elounda Bay and the Kolokytha Peninsula and the documentation and mapping of the submerged structures on both sides of Poros, where the urban center of the ancient city is situated.
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| Documentation of remains of a later shipwreck to the west of the Poros Bay [Credit: Greek Ministry of Culture] |
In one of these, the research identified chiselled bollards and the loading platform. Also found were ships’ ballast, anchors, accidental rejects, signs of a Byzantine shipwreck, as well as remnants of a more recent 20th century shipwreck.
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| Remains of submerged buildings on the seabed of the Poros Bay in Elounda [Credit: Greek Ministry of Culture] |
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| Cleaning ancient structures in the Poros Bay to achieve satisfactory mapping [Credit: Greek Ministry of Culture] |
Evidence on the sea bed surface and the coast is completed by an investigation below the region’s sea bed by geophysical surveys (magnetic and electrical tomography), which show the existence of structures at depths of up to -1.5 m below seabed level.
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| Cleaning part of the wall of ancient Oloundas in the Bay of 'Hava Lakkos' [Credit: Greek Ministry of Culture] |
During the same period, the two bodies conducted a three-day reconnaissance of the port of Ierapetra to comprehend the remains of the harbour works and natural formations found in the area. The brief survey assisted by “Ierapetra”, the local cultural association, gathered necessary data to get a clearer understanding of the site.
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| View of a 3D depiction of part of the wall of ancient Oloundas, submerged today in the Bay of Poros [Credit: Greek Ministry of Culture] |
Source: Greek Ministry of Culture [trsl. Archaeology & Arts, February 01, 2020]
* This article was originally published here






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