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Ancient Greek Shipwrecks to Become Underwater Museums

Summary: The site of the Peristera shipwreck. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture and SportsGreece is relaxing its strict regulations regarding its rich underwater heritage and has recently announced that it will allow divers to tour the sites of certain ancient shi

The site of the Peristera shipwreck. Source: Greek Ministry of Culture and Sports

Greece is relaxing its strict regulations regarding its rich underwater heritage and has recently announced that it will allow divers to tour the sites of certain ancient shipwrecks.

Until now, only archaeologists and divers with special permits could marvel at and explore the ancient finds in the deeps of the Aegean Sea due to fears that their countless antiquities would be looted.

The first ancient shipwreck to be opened to the general public is near the island of Alonissos, in the northern Aegean. Divers will soon be allowed to tour the magnificent shipwreck of Peristera, named for the uninhabited Greek island opposite Alonissos where it was discovered in the early 1990s.

The cargo ship was laden with thousands of amphorae, or vases, most likely containing wine, when it sank in the late fifth century BC.

Non-divers will be able to experience the site through virtual reality in a nearby information center on land.

Thousands of ancient vases, the vast majority of them intact, lie in layers at the Peristera shipwreck site. Fish, sponges and other sea creatures have made the amphorae their home over the millennia, adding color and life to the site.

In some places, the ancient ship’s cargo towers above divers as they swim along the perimeter of the wreck.

Amazingly, the ancient shipwreck still keeps many mys

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