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 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/daily/
sept99/noah26.htm


 Trailing Ancient Mariners

 By Guy Gugliotta
 Washington Post Staff Writer
 Sunday, September 26, 1999; Page A1

 As the story is told in the Old Testament, the great flood
 lasted for 40 days and 40 nights, and submerged every living
 thing on Earth beneath 24 feet of water, sparing only Noah,
 his family and the pairs of animals he protected on his ark.

 Scientists have never found Noah or his ark, but they believe
 in his flood.  It happened about 7,600 years ago, when the
 Mediterranean Sea, swollen by melted glaciers, breached a
 natural dam separating it from the freshwater lake known
 today as the Black Sea.

 It was an apocalyptic event, in many respects much worse than
 anything described in Genesis.  Every day for two years, 10
 cubic miles of sea water cut through the narrow channel now
 known as the Bosporus, and plunged into the lake -- more than
 200 times the flow over Niagara Falls.  Every day the lake
 level rose six inches.

 And every day the water marched another mile inland, forcing
 people and animals to flee or drown, killing freshwater fish
 and plants by the ton, inundating forests, villages and
 entire cities and spreading pestilence and death for miles.

 But as the deluge filled the lake and transformed it into a
 sea, it also created an ecosystem unique in the world -- an
 oxygenless abyss where shipwrecks could rest for thousands of
 years in chill, inert darkness uncorrupted by living
 creatures.

 The possible presence of old ships in near-mint condition on
 the Black Sea floor has made Noah's flood the starting point
 for perhaps the most ambitious project ever undertaken in the
 emerging field of deep-water archaeology.

 Since explorer Robert D. Ballard discovered the Titanic
 12,500 feet beneath the North Atlantic in 1985, deep-sea
 experts have used ever more sophisticated robots and
 submersibles to plumb the world's seas for both science and
 profit.

 Secrets that have withstood prying eyes for hundreds or even
 thousands of years are being unlocked in a new age of
 discovery reminiscent of the early days of space travel.

 In 1988, commercial salvagers found perhaps $1 billion in
 gold in the 19th century paddle wheeler Central America,
 sunk in deep water off the North Carolina coast.  In 1998,
 Tampa-based salvagers found a 2,500-year Phoenician cargo
 ship off Gibraltar.

 In 1989, Ballard found the German battleship Bismarck, sunk
 by the British in 15,600 feet of water during World War II,
 and this summer he found two ships nearly 3,000 years old
 lying more than 1,000 feet below the surface of the Eastern
 Mediterranean.

 But the "Black Sea Project," with Ballard as lead
 oceanographer, has far more audacious goals than the
 discovery of a single ship.  The project hopes to prove
 that literally thousands of years of history may lie intact
 in the shipwrecks that are blanketed by the sterile waters
 of Noah's flood.

 "It's very much like a bathtub, but without a drain," Ballard
 said.  "The Bosporus acts like an overflow valve, but the
 trapped water can't circulate, so it went anoxic [lost its
 oxygen] long ago.  Such conditions exist nowhere else in the
 world."

 In the past five years, project researchers trying to
 determine the Black Sea trade routes of antiquity have
 studied scientific literature, history and classical texts
 such as the myth of Jason, whose quest for the Golden Fleece
 is believed to have made him the first of the ancient Greeks
 to enter the Black Sea.

 At project headquarters in the Turkish city of Synope,
 archaeologists mapped a seaport that acted as a major trading
 center during the Bronze Age, 5,000 years ago, and maybe even
 earlier.  Artifacts have linked Synope to Black Sea sites
 north in the Crimea and west in Bulgaria, as well as to Troy,
 the fabled Aegean city that guarded the entrance to the Black
 Sea.

 Rather than hugging the coast, the research suggests,
 sailors were willing to save time and money by traveling
 point-to-point over waters reaching depths close to 7,000
 feet.

 "Once an ancient mariner got into water beyond visual depth,
 he didn't know how deep it was," Ballard said.  "Here you've
 got a trade route that can be documented as far back as any."

 And just this summer, the project's underwater surveyors
 found an ancient coastline at a depth of 450 feet, just above
 the anoxic dead zone:  "I'm not sure whether it's Noah's
 flood, or not Noah's flood," said David Mindell, a
 Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor leading the
 marine survey.  "But I do buy that there was a flood."

 In the early days of deep sea archaeology, a complex,
 multidisciplinary effort like the Black Sea Project would
 have been unthinkable.  Only governments and large
 corporations could afford to invest in the technology, used
 principally for mineral prospecting, pipeline maintenance and
 military intelligence.

 But since the Titanic discovery, the tools of the trade have
 improved dramatically, as has the technical expertise of
 those who use them.  And where engineers once jealously
 guarded their recovery techniques, today's explorers can
 purchase much of the machinery, including the basic robot,
 known as a "remotely operated vehicle" (ROV), off the shelf.

 "It's getting to the point where virtually anybody can go
 down and look," said Greg Stemm, whose Tampa-based Odyssey
 Marine Exploration Inc. found the ancient Phoenician wreck
 off Gibraltar while searching for a British treasure ship.
 "ROVs are like buying a new computer.  You want to wait as
 long as you can before committing."

 The theory of the Black Sea's Neolithic catastrophe was
 developed by Columbia University marine geologists William
 Ryan and Walter Pitman over three decades of research and
 published this year in their book "Noah's Flood."

 The authors describe how the sea level worldwide began to
 rise as glaciers melted at the end of the last ice age
 15,000 years ago.  When the melt began, the Black Sea was a
 freshwater lake fed by rivers, among them those known today
 as the Danube, the Dnieper and the Don.

 On the lake's southern edge, a 360-foot natural dam held back
 the waters of what is now the Mediterranean Sea.  By 7,600
 years ago, sea level probably had risen to within 15 feet of
 the lip of the Bosporus.  And then it flooded.

 "It probably started as a trickle when it pierced the
 Bosporus valley," Pitman said in an interview.  "But when it
 got to the Black Sea, it gouged out a channel, and within
 60 days it began to flood with a rush."

 It was a one-of-a-kind event, and it had a unique result.
 The incoming salt water, denser than the fresh water it
 displaced, plunged straight to the bottom of the lake bed.
 As the seawater rose, the fresh water floated on top, and,
 being less dense, stayed on top, flowing in from the northern
 rivers and out via the Bosporus.

 This bathtub phenomenon repressed the natural heat exchange
 that causes water to circulate and reoxygenate in seas and
 lakes throughout the world.  Trapped on the bottom, the
 creatures that lived in the original floodwater used up the
 original oxygen, then died.

 Today, the top 450 feet of the Black Sea are constantly
 renewed and support a vigorous marine life.  But the abyss,
 leached of oxygen long ago, lies like a cold blanket
 thousands of feet deep covering the sea floor and its
 secrets.

 If there is no oxygen, then there should be none of the
 wood-boring mollusks that consume wooden ships at almost any
 depth.  Marine archaeologists learned long ago that in
 ordinary circumstances, an old wooden wreck will appear as
 nothing more than a jumble of amphorae or other cargo on the
 sea bottom.  Part of the hull may be intact if it has sunk
 into the mud, but exposed wood will have been eaten.

 But in the Black Sea, anything on the bottom should be intact
 -- including ancient wooden ships.  And because the Black Sea
 lies within shouting distance of the Fertile Crescent and
 served as a commercial waterway for civilizations from
 ancient Greece to Byzantium and the Ottoman Empire, the
 possibilities are dazzling:  "One should have a complete
 chronicle of human history," Ballard said.

 This was the pitch he made in 1994 to archaeologist Fredrik
 T. Hiebert, a specialist in ancient trade along the "silk
 road" linking central Asia with the West.  If Hiebert could
 find a trade route across the Black Sea, Ballard said, then
 deep water archaeology could find the wrecks:  "This was
 the most incredible thing I had ever heard," Hiebert said.
 "The only problem was that the Black Sea is huge."

 Hiebert agreed to oversee a series of library studies to
 determine what trade existed and found solid evidence that
 the ancient peoples on all sides of the waterway had a brisk
 interchange of goods.

 Along the coast, whether in Synope or modern Ukraine or
 Russia, artifacts showed remarkable similarities.  Roof tiles
 in the Crimea were stamped with the Greek word "Synope," and
 studies of ocean currents and winds showed that sailors could
 travel the 180-mile south-north route across the sea from
 Synope to the Crimea, and probably did.  But it was
 dangerous, Hiebert said:  "Roman historians wrote about it."

 Funded by the University of Pennsylvania and the National
 Geographic Society, Hiebert, a Penn archaeologist, and
 Ballard began work on the project.  Hiebert, in charge of
 dry land archaeology, mapped the land site, while Mindell
 managed the marine survey.

 "We were already up and running because of the anoxic water
 and the shipwrecks," Mindell recalled, but then "Noah's
 Flood" was published, with its suggestion that entire
 cultures may lie submerged below the ancient floodwaters.

 The group expanded its mandate to include a search along the
 old coastline.  Next year, Hiebert will spot likely locations
 for ancient settlements, and Mindell will look for them.

 Meanwhile, Ballard will use the government's ROV "JASON" to
 begin scouting the old trade route, aided by a narrow-beam
 sonar developed by Mindell that can discern a wreck through
 up to 12 feet of sediment.

 Perhaps then, Ballard said, the team will be able to answer
 its most important question:  Have the wood-borers figured
 out a way to work in the Black Sea abyss, "or do the wrecks
 have sails?"



 � 1999 The Washington Post Company





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