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Sunken city revealed

Published 9:00 pm Thursday, June 7, 2001

Associated Press

ALEXANDRIA, Egypt – An earthquake 1,200 years ago sent the ancient port city of Herakleion crashing to the floor of the Mediterranean Sea. On Thursday, archaeologists unveiled some of its hidden treasures, including a giant stone tablet that pinpointed the lost city’s location.

The tablet, or stele, was one of two – and the other, researchers said, was among the largest ever found. The smaller block, almost black in color and about a third the size of the giant stele, stood supported by a frame.

The two stone tablets were displayed Thursday on a barge moored in Abu Qir Bay, east of modern Alexandria’s downtown. On the same barge were three giant statues – one of Hapi, the god of the Nile flood, and the others of a pharaoh and his queen, both unidentified.

“Just after a couple of dives, we discovered so many objects. The site is rich and amazing,” said diver Eric Smith of Key West, Fla.

The excavation proves that Herakleion was “an important pharaonic harbor city and entrance to ancient Egypt,” said French archaeologist Franck Goddio, the leader of the international team excavating the underwater site. “We have learned so much in just one year.”

Hieroglyphic text on the smaller stele gave the city’s name and said the giant stone was set at the Nile’s exit into the Mediterranean by order of Pharaoh Nektanebo I in 380 B.C., Goddio said.

About 1,200 years ago an earthquake sent Herakleion and nearby Canopus and Menouthis to the sea bottom. The three cities were known only through Greek tragedies, travelogues and legends until Goddio’s team announced last year that they had been rediscovered after a two-year search off Egypt’s northern coast in waters 20 to 30 feet deep.

The team has been working since then at a site about four miles out to sea. Temples, foundations and 10 sunken boats are among discoveries that have helped confirm the harbor’s location.

Ibrahim Darwish, director of the underwater department of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said as many as 20,000 pieces remain on the sea floor.

“Excavation could continue here for another 100 years, the site is that large,” Darwish said of the dig, which measures about two-thirds of a mile by three-quarters of a mile.

The other stele displayed Thursday was found broken into 15 pieces that together weighed 10 tons. If pieced together, it would stand 20 feet tall, 10 feet wide and as deep as a hand. It bore Greek and hieroglyphic inscriptions that have not yet been deciphered.

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