A towboat carrying a huge "steel box" left the port of Guangzhou in
south China on Sunday morning to begin salvage work on an
800-year-old ship, the most precious ancient ship found so far in
the world.
The towboat with the "steel box" will sail for two days before
reaching the working waters, some 20 nautical miles west of Hailing
Island of Yangjiang City in south China's Guangdong Province,
according to the Guangzhou Daily.
The sunken ship, which dates back to the early Southern Song
Dynasty (1127-1279), was the first ancient vessel discovered on the
"Marine Silk Road" of the South China Sea and was named "Nanhai
No.1", literally South China Sea No.1.
Nanhai No.1 was found by chance in 1987. The ship, more than 25
meters long, is the largest cargo ship from the Song Dynasty so far
discovered. The total value of the shipwreck may be over US$100
billion.
Green glazed porcelain plates, tin pots, shadowy blue porcelains
and other rare antiques have been found during the initial
exploration of the ship. Archaeologists estimate that there are
probably 50,000 to 70,000 relics on the ship, and that the
archeological value of the Nanhai No.1 is no less than the
terracotta warriors of Emperor Qinshihuang.
The "steel box" measures 35.7 meters in length, 14.4 meters in
width and 12 meters in height, weighing 530 tons. It will be
used to salvage the ship with two meters thick of silt that covers
it together to better protect the precious relics.
After salvage, the ancient ship, with its silt, will be put in a
huge glass pool, in which water temperature, pressure and other
environmental conditions will be the same as on the sea bed where
the ship has slept for 800 years.
Archaeologists will then conduct thorough excavations of the
ship in the pool.
It is estimated that the ship will surface in mid-July, till
then questions -- such as which port was the ancient ship's
destination and how did it sink -- will be addressed by
archaeologists.
(CRI May 6, 2007)