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Sabtu, 8 Mac 2014

THE PORT ROYAL PROJECT 

ARCHAEOLOGICAL EXCAVATIONS


In 1981, the Nautical Archaeology Program of Texas A&M University, in cooperation with the Institute of Nautical Archaeology (INA) and the Jamaica National Heritage Trust (JNHT), began underwater archaeological investigations of the submerged portion of the 17th-century town of Port Royal, Jamaica.  Present evidence indicates that while the areas of Port Royal that lay along the edge of the harbor slid and jumbled as they sank, destroying most of the archaeological context, the area investigated by TAMU / INA, located some distance from the harbor, sank vertically, with minimal horizontal disturbance.


In contrast to many archaeological sites, the investigation of Port Royal yielded much more than simply trash and discarded items.  An unusually large amount of perishable, organic artifacts were recovered, preserved in the oxygen-depleted underwater environment.

Together with the vast treasury of complimentary historical documents, the underwater excavations of Port Royal have allowed for a detailed reconstruction of everyday life in an English colonial port city of the late 17th century.


The Port Royal Project concentrated for 10 years on the submerged 17th-century remains on Lime Street, near its intersection with Queen and High Streets in the commercial center of the town. At present, eight buildings have been investigated.  The work has resulted in a more detailed body of data on the buildings and their in situ artifacts than any previous excavations at Port Royal - on land or on under water.


Excavated Areas of Old Port Royal Jamaica

The construction features of five of the investigated buildings exemplify the variety of architectural styles found in the city's center.  Some were well-built, multi-storied brick structures, while others were simple, earth-bound frame buildings, hastily erected, with no intention for them to last.  In several instances, a small core building was constructed, and then rooms were tacked on as needed, until the structure formed a complex.   Both brick and timber buildings have contributed significantly to our understanding of 17th-century town planning, architecture, diet, cooking activities, and other aspects of daily life.

ach of the five fully investigated buildings has a compliment of records that pertain, in some way, either to the owners, occupants, or the makers of the associated artifacts:


BUILDING 1 -  A well-built brick building that consists of two construction phases and which has six ground-floor rooms divided into three separate two-room combinations.  These rooms were used as a probable pipe shop, a tavern, and a combination wood turner/cobbler's shop.

BUILDING 2 - A poorly preserved, frame building to the west of Building 1.  It has a plaster floor.


BUILDING 3 -This building, with its raised sills on a mortar foundation and interrupted floor sills at the corners and at major intersections, lies east of Building 1.  Its front rooms have plastered floors, and one room has a sand floor.


BUILDING 4/5 - This, the final building that has been excavated thus far, is a large, rambling complex consisting of at least six rooms and three back yards.  The complex is approximately 65 ft. wide and over 40 ft. long and represents at least two, and possibly three, different houses or combination houses/shops.

This well-preserved brick building complex has plastered walls, brick floors, and wooden door sills.  The initial construction phase consisted of Rooms 1 and 2 and the sidewalk at the front of Building 5.  Room 1, the large room to the west, has a plaster floor, while the smaller Room 2 has a herringbone brick floor and a stairwell.  Rooms 3 and 4, which were added in a later construction phase, are tacked to the south of Room 2.  Their purpose may have been to join an exterior kitchen to the building, represented by Room 4.  Both back rooms have common bond brick floors, and Room 4 contains a large hearth and oven.

Building 4, which consists of at least two rooms, is located to the east of Building 5. It also has a hearth. The presence of half-brick-wide interior walls dividing Rooms 1 and 3 of Building 4 indicate a much less substantial, one-story building addition.  Horizontal displacements, seen most readily at the east end, in Room 3, have skewed the floor and walls several feet.

Building 4/5 has produced more in situ artifacts than any building thus far excavated.  To the front of the building, in what would have been a part of Lime Street, a large section of a fallen wall was discovered.  This wall may have fallen out from Building 5 or from a building to the north.  It was in this area of the fallen exterior wall that we found the wooden frame of a four-partition window with leaded glass panes within a wrought-iron frame.  Numerous other artifacts were found in association with the building, including two sets of 28 Chinese porcelain Fo Dogs and a minimum of 28 Chinese porcelain cups and bowls.  Pewter plates, candlesticks, a brass mortar, an English tin-glazed vase, a decorated Dutch Delft plate, a gold ring, a pearl with a gold attachment, silver forks and spoons, and many encrusted metal objects that are awaiting identification, conservation, and analysis were found in the same area.

The remains of a young child was uncovered from under the bricks of the fallen front wall just outside of the two adjacent front doorways.  The remains of two more children were found in Rooms 3 and 4.  The remains of a ship, which ripped through the front walls and tore through the floors of the four rooms on the east side of the building complex, have also been identified.

Source
by GFExplorer

It would take over 400 years to excavate all of the wrecked ships currently unclaimed on the oceans floors. But just think of all the treasure you might find.


A sunken treasure chest
In the future, will they think shopping trolleys were works of art?

Flor de la Mar – Sumatra, Malaysia

Among the richest shipwrecks never recovered, the 16th Century Portuguese vessel, Flor De La Mar was lost around 1511 in a storm off the northern coast of Sumatra. Containing the stolen treasures of the Melaka kingdom in modern day Malaysia, the Flor de la Mar’s cargo, including 60 tons of gold remains undiscovered despite lying in some of the best diving waters of the world.

Merchant Royal – Dartmouth, UK

Britain’s largest unrecovered treasure haul lies just 21 miles (34 km) from Land’s End in Cornwall. The Merchant Royal, returning to England with a cargo of Spanish treasure sank in bad weather on 23 September 1641, containing 500 bars of gold, silver and precious stones. Bring a dry suit and a torch.

San Jose – Baru Peninsula, Colombia

In 1708, during the War of Spanish Succession, English Commodore, Charles Wagner captured and sank Spanish treasure ship, The San Jose in less than 1000 feet (305 metres) of crystal blue water, between the Isla del Tesoro (known as treasure island) and Baru Peninsula. The San Jose’s cargo is estimated today at a value of more than $1 billion.

Nuestra Senora de Atocha – Key West, Florida, USA

In 1985, Florida treasure hunter Mel Fischer hit the mother lode when, after 16 years of dedicated hunting, he located the wreck of the Nuestra Senora de Atocha about 35 miles (56 km) off the coast of Key West, Florida. Carrying a haul that included over 40 tonnes of silver and gold, 100,000 Spanish coins and Columbian emeralds, Fischer’s family now run diving holidays around the Atocha where artefacts continue to be uncovered.

HMS Victory – English Channel, UK

In 2009 US company Odyssey Marine Exploration announced that it had discovered the predecessor of Lord Nelson’s Victory, sunk in 1744, on a group of rocks known as The Casquets near to the Channel Islands. Thought to contain 100,000 gold coins, a legal row continues as to ownership of the haul.

Notre Dame de la Deliverance – Key West, Florida, USA

In November 1755 Spanish Galleon Notre Dame de la Deliverance left Havana with treasures collected from mines in Mexico, Peru and Colombia. A day later the ship was caught in a hurricane and sank with almost all hands, 40 miles from Florida’s Key West. Containing an estimated $2 billion in lost gold and silver, the site of the Deliverance was allegedly discovered in 2003 but has yet to be raised.

USS San Jacinto – Abacos, Bahamas

The waters off the island of Abacos in the Bahama’s combine some of the world’s best diving, plus an estimated 500 wrecks to discover and explore. Perhaps most interesting of the discovered wrecks in this area is the USS San Jacinto, an experimental civil war era gunship, among the first to be powered by steam, that sank off Chub Rocks in 1865.

Hoi An Junk – Da Nang Peninsula, Vietnam

During the 1990s a junk was discovered which sank in over 260 feet (79 metres) of water, 14 miles (22.5 km) from the Da Nang peninsula in Vietnam. Appearing to be of Thai origin, its spectacular cargo of blue and white and polychrome ceramics, painted with human figures, landscapes, fish, birds, and mythological animals, dates to Vietnam’s Golden Age of the mid-15th century.

Source

Khamis, 6 Mac 2014


Ecco un esempio di pura deficienza umana, di mancato rispetto per qualsiasi forma di vita, chi tratta così un animale ( ammesso che un delfino possa essere definito solo un animale) non avrà mai il mio rispetto e la mia stima.......ogni giorno mi vergogno sempre più di far parte del genere umano!
Here is an example of pure human deficiency, lack of respect for any life form, who is thus an animal (assuming a Dolphin can be defined only an animal) will never have my respect and my estimate ... .... every day more and more ashamed to be part of the human race! (Translated by Bing)

Rabu, 5 Mac 2014


Tiga penyu ditemui mati terdampar di pantai

ROMPIN – Tiga ekor penyu ditemui mati terdampar di Pantai Hiburan, Kuala Rompin, di sini, oleh seorang penduduk yang balik dari memukat pada petang Isnin lalu.

Bagaimanapun, ketika wartawan Sinar Harian di bawa lokasi penemuan bangkai penyu tersebut pada pagi Selasa lalu, hanya seekor yang tinggal dan dua lagi telah hilang kemungkinan dibawa ombak akibat air pasang.

Menurut seorang penduduk, Mohd Radzi Abdul Manan, 31, dia dimaklumkan oleh seorang kenalan yang juga individu yang menemui bangkai penyu tersebut dan terus bergegas untuk melihatnya.

“Kawan saya jumpa bangkai tiga ekor penyu itu dalam pukul 6.30 petang Isnin lalu dan kemudiannya dia maklum pada saya yang kebetulan pada petang itu saya juga sedang berada di Pantai Hiburan membawa anak bersiar-siar.

“Sampai di lokasi, saya lihat memang betul terdapat tiga ekor penyu yang telah mati dan timbul juga rasa sedih kerana melihat haiwan yang dilindungi itu mati sedemikian,” katanya kepada Sinar Harian.

Sementara itu, Timbalan Pegawai Perikanan Daerah Rompin, Masri Bidin yang dihubungi Sinar Harian mengesahkan bahawa ini kali pertama kes penemuan penyu mati di pantai sekitar Kuala Rompin.

Sumber

THIS AWFUL WINTER IS NO MATCH FOR THE TOYOTA TACOMA POLAR EXPEDITION TRUCK



Instead of fretting over whether your sedan can handle the next snow storm, perhaps you should sell a large quantity of your possessions and buy this Toyota Tacoma Polar Expedition Concept Truck. Hey, you can always win the lottery later.


The one-off vehicle was designed to traverse the wintry landscape of Antarctica, and did just that in 2011 when Jason De Carteret broke records in it.


Complete with four racing seats, a 4-liter V6 supercharged engine, an all steel body, and the ability to carry 330 gallons of gas (let that sink in for a sec), it truly is a beast. Not sure what the final bid will be, but considering it cost over $400k to create, you might just want to attach a plow to your ride instead.

Source

Selasa, 4 Mac 2014

Once upon a time, an ancient city in China was named Lion City because Five Lion Mountain loomed large behind it. The city, also known as Shi Cheng, has been buried beneath the water for 53 years. Like the lost Incan City of Machu Picchu was ‘rediscovered,’ so was this lost underwater city that had been founded about 1,300 years ago. Lion City is now located about 85 – 131 feet (26-40 meters) beneath the gorgeous Thousand Island Lake (Qiandao Lake). This valley was submerged when a dam was constructed and a lake was needed. The lake and thousands of islands were man-made. Shi Cheng ‘defied’ the Chinese norm since 5 gates and 5 towers were built into the city instead of 4. Lion City is about the size of 62 football fields. International archaeologists and a film crew recorded the amazing perservation of the lost ‘ruins.’ 


More than half a century ago, the Chinese flooded Lion City, also called Shi Cheng. Recently Shi Cheng was explored by archaeologists who dubbed ‘Lion City’ as China’s ‘Atlantis rediscovered.’ Photo #1 by Chinese National Geography via Cheer All



Thousand Island Lake (Qiandao Lake) is a gorgeous man-made lake located in Zhejiang, China. Photo #2 by trasyy


The first underwater exploration attempt of the drowned city was in 2001 when it was discovered there were 265 arches in the preserved ruins. Lion City is about the size of 62 football fields. Photo (Drawing) #4 by Chinese National Geography



The valley was flooded in 1959 to create the lake for the Xin’an River Dam project. This is Xinanjiang Hydroelectric Station. Photo #3 by Dragon Moon Bay Hotel


According to Our World, “It was decided to make an underwater city accessible to tourists. Special submarine height of 3.8 meters and a length of 23 meters with a capacity of 48 passengers, was built over six million U.S. dollars to bring everyone in the underwater kingdom.” The proof-of-conceptarchimedes bridge, a submerged floating tunnel, was not finished and was “banned” to avoid damaging the “delicate undersea structures.” This image was captured in January 2011 as an underwater film crew tagged along with archaeologists to explore Qiandao Lake and the ancient Lion City. Photo #5 by Chinese National Geography via Animal World


This aerial shot of Thousand Island Lake is interesting, but even more interesting is what lies underneath in the Lost Lion City. Photo #6 by fotki


According to National Geography, as the dive depth increased beneath Qiandao Lake, ever darkening, it was almost all black by 28 meters underwater. The diving lights gave only about two meters of visibility and the submerged city is at a depth of 26-40 meters (85 – 131 feet). But they found out that even wooden beams and stairs were intact. Photo #7 by Our World


Intricate carvings engraved on buildings as seen when Chinese National Geography released images taken by archaeologists/divers rediscovering the the underwater ‘lost’ city. Photo #8 by Chinese National Geography


There is a chain of over 1,078 man-made large islands and a few thousand smaller ones at Qiandao Lake. Photo #9 by Oksana Lyutova



According to Chinese National Geography, “This is a restoration picture of Shicheng city in east China’s Zhejiang Province. The city has been submerged under Qiandao Lake since 1959 and the construction of the Xin’an River Hydropower Station.” Photo #10 by Chinese National Geography


Massive amount of fish on Yule Bridge, as seen while crossing one of the Thousand Lake Islands. Photo #11 by lenhz


This is called ‘Lovers Island.’ Photo #12 by Dragon Moon Bay Hotel


Carp jumping wildly, fishing in China near where “Atlantis” was “rediscovered.” Photo #13 by prikol



International archeologists said Lion City was an underwater ‘time capsule’. Wikipedia states, “At the foot of the Wu Shi mountain (Five Lion Mountain) lays an ancient city known as Shi Cheng (Lions City), built in Dong Han period (25 – 200), first was set up as county in 208, it was named ‘Lion City’ because of the Five Lion Mountain that sits just behind the city. The city remains undisturbed from the surface at a depth of 26-40m, Big Blue dive operator based in Shanghai, runs weekend trips twice a month throughout the year to the city and has started to uncover parts of the lost city.” Photo #14 by Chinese National Geography via1-4all


This was the ancient city in 2008. Photo #15 by Nihaopaul


Lion City had five city gates, each with a tower. Before it was buried beneath the water, Shicheng City had six main stone streets that were used to connect every corner of the city. Photo #16 by Chinese National Geography via 1-4all 


Qiandao Hu fishing village as seen while touring Thousand Island Lake. Photo #17 by le niners


Cable cars over lush forests, another mode of transportation on Qiandaohu. Photo #18 by Daniel Hjort


Autumn at Qiandao Lake. Photo #19 by Patrick He



Deep beneath Thousand Island Lake used to be a political and economic hub of the region. Photo #20 by trasyy


Before Shi Cheng was submerged, 290,000 people had to be relocated from a city where their ancestors had lived in for over 1,300 years. Photo #21 by Daniel Hjort


Sunset over the Thousand Island Lake. Photo #22 by Dale Ellerm


Aerial shot of Quiando Lake. This is a tourist hotspot with ‘theme’ islands including Bird Island, Snake Island, Monkey Island, Lock Island and Island to Remind You of Your Childhood. Photo #23 by Our Planet


Isnin, 3 Mac 2014

Apa yang tertulis di dalam Al-Quran adalah benar sepertimana firman Allah, Fir’aun dan pengikut-pengikutnya ditenggelamkan  kerana  mendustakan ayat-ayat Tuhannya . Kini kebenaran ayat Al-Quran tersebut di buktikan apabila sebuah bandar di dalam air di temui selepas 1500 tahun.
Berdasarkan Firman Allah…
“(Keadaan mereka) serupa dengan keadaan Fir’aun dan pengikut-pengikutnya serta orang-orang yang sebelumnya. Mereka mendustakan ayat-ayat Tuhannya maka Kami membinasakan mereka disebabkan dosa-dosanya dan Kami tenggelamkan Fir’aun dan pengikut-pengikutnya; dan kesemuanya adalah orang-orang yang zalim.” (QS. Al Anfaal, 8: 54).
Ianya ditemui apabila sekumpulan arkeologi yang diketuai oleh seorang ahli arkeologi marin Perancis Franck Goddio terjumpa beberapa peninggalan, ia membawa mereka kepada salah satu penemuan terbesar dalam abad ke-21, iaitu bandar dalam air ini.
Penemuan itu berlaku apabila Goddio berusaha mencari kapal perang Napoleon dari 1798 Battle of the Nile, apabila dia telah dikalahkan oleh Nelson pada ketika itu, dan ianya telah membawa kepada penemuan ini. Pasukan Goddio telah disertai oleh Pusat Oxford bagi Maritim Arkeologi dan Jabatan Antikuiti Mesir telah menghasilkan pelbagai penemuan ini.
Diantara penemuannya adalah seperti patung dewa Hapi, patung granit merah ratu Ptolemy,dulang emas, Patung gangsa daripada dinasti ke-26 Firaun, Satu Lampu Purba dan berbagai penemuan lagi.
Penyelidik juga telah mendedahkan pelbagai artifak keagamaan di bandar tenggelam itu, termasuk ukiran batu 16 kaki dianggap telah menghiasi kuil pusat bandar dan sarcophagi batu kapur yang dipercayai mengandungi haiwan mumia.
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