An ancient Greek shipwreck off the coast of Sicily has yielded ingots of orichalcum, the mythical "Atlantis metal," offering ...
Off the coast of Sicily, a 2,500-year-old shipwreck was discovered, and it could uncover some new information about ancient ...
A shipwreck dating back to the 5th and 6th centuries B.C. was discovered earlier this year off the coast of Sicily, Italian ...
A fifth-century Greek shipwreck that contains orichalcum is to be recovered from the seabed off Sicily, Italian authorities announced.
The so-called lost continent of Atlantis has been the source of speculation throughout the ages - although modern scientists doubt it ever actually existed.
Dating to the fifth or sixth century B.C.E., the vessel could provide new insights into the relationship between the ancient Greeks and Carthaginians ...
Often said to possess a reddish hue, there were many hints that orichalcum might be a form of brass – an alloy of copper and ...
An archaic shipwreck that dates back to the 5th and 6th centuries B.C. has been discovered in the waters off the coast of Santa Maria del Focallo, municipality of Ispica, Sicily, Italy.
An archaic shipwreck that dates back to the 5th and 6th centuries B.C. has been discovered in the waters off the coast of Santa Maria del Focallo, municipality of Ispica, Sicily, Italy. The find also ...
A Roman-era shipwreck from the bed of the Mediterranean ... that the ingots were destined for a known Roman trading hub, as Sicily was a strategic crossroads of commerce in antiquity.