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Officials recently unveiled the deepest-recorded shipwreck in French waters, complete with a remarkably well-preserved cargo dating back 500 years.
Rare 16th-Century Shipwreck Discovered at Record Depth in French Waters The 98-foot-long vessel was transporting ceramic jugs, ceramic plates and metal bars when it sank off southeastern France ...
Military Officers Were Doing a Routine Seafloor Scan—and Found a 16th-Century Shipwreck The ship’s cargo—at least 200 earthenware pitchers—was still aboard.
Drone discovers 16th-century shipwreck at record depth in French waters In a groundbreaking deep-sea discovery, archaeologists have located the wreckage of a 16th-century merchant ship more than 2 ...
Couple Invests Over $750K into an Abandoned 21,500-Square-Foot, 16th-Century Italian Palace in Surprising Condition (Exclusive) ...
A 16th-century merchant shipwreck has been discovered 2,567 metres deep off the coast of Ramatuelle in southern France, making it the deepest ever found in French territorial waters.
16th-century shipwreck found off French coast, 2,567metres deep Elon Musk's "No Kings" post goes viral Maddow Blog | ‘No Kings’ protests, special election results leave no doubt about the ...
A drone discovered by chance what archaeologists say are the remains of a 16th-century ship more than 1.5 miles underwater off southern France.
The French navy discovered a remarkable 16th-century shipwreck of a merchant vessel, Camarat 4, at a record depth of 8,200 feet, preserving ceramic artifacts.
The remarkably preserved body of an early modern saint, St. Teresa of Avila, has been exhibited in Spain months after being found "miraculously incorrupt" last year.
A 16th century brass signet ring was discovered in the rubble of a monument in Poland, photos show. It has an oval shield and what appears to be initials.