Items of limestone buildings, marble and granite royal statues, and the stays of a service provider ship are among the many relics of an historical sunken metropolis retrieved by Egyptian authorities off the shores of Alexandria.
Relationship again greater than 2,000 years, the artifacts have been reportedly hoisted from a submerged archaeological website in Abu Qir Bay yesterday, August 21. Egyptian officers advised Agence France-Presse that the world could also be a part of the long-lost seaport Canopus, a distinguished commerce, spiritual, and luxurious hub that flourished throughout Egypt’s Ptolemaic dynasty and the Roman empire. A mix of rising sea ranges and steady earthquakes drowned the metropolis and neighboring Thonis-Heracleion roughly 1,200 years in the past.
Like its historical predecessors, Alexandria can also be weak to rising sea ranges. The United Nations estimates that a minimum of a 3rd of the historic metropolis shall be underwater or uninhabitable by 2050, displacing 1.5 million of its six million residents.
Divers watch as a crane recovers a statue from the depths at Abu Qir Bay. (photograph by Khaled Desouki/AFP through Getty Pictures)
The resurfaced artifacts embody remnants of buildings which will have been spiritual areas, residences, and business companies. Officers additionally recovered partially preserved pre-Roman statues of sovereigns and sphinxes, comparable to a beheaded Ptolemaic granite sculpture and an incomplete sphinx with a cartouche bearing the inscription of Ramesses II, whose reign as pharaoh was the second longest in Egyptian historical past. Different finds included rock-carved ponds used for fish cultivation and water storage.
The newly recovered artifacts are set to be featured in an ongoing exhibition on the Alexandria Nationwide Museum exploring the Greek, Roman, and Hellenistic historical past by way of underwater archaeology, NBC reported. Secrets and techniques of the Sunken Metropolis opened this week and presently shows 86 artifacts.
“There’s a lot underwater, but what we’re able to bring up is limited, it’s only specific material according to strict criteria,” Egypt’s tourism and antiquities minister Sherif Fath advised AFP concerning the lately retrieved archaeological treasures. “The rest will remain part of our sunken heritage.”

