Into the deep for relics
Updated: 2014-09-16 07:44
By Wang Kaihao(China Daily)
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Photo provided to China Daily |
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Renovation programme underway at Labrang Monastery |
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Ceramics declining in Central China's county |
Nanhai One:
The wreckage of this ship, about 30-meters long and 9-meter wide, from the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279) that sank near Yangjiang in Guangdong province was first found in 1987. But archeological investigations into one of the country's biggest ancient shipwrecks only began in 2007. Findings including 80,000 pieces of well-preserved porcelain are considered among the top relics from the Maritime Silk Road days.
Huaguangjiao One:
Found by fishermen near the Xisha Islands in 1996 and plundered in the following year, the wreckage of the 19-meter-long ship from the Southern Song Dynasty witnessed China's first large-scale underwater archeological expedition on the high seas between 2007 and 2008. Nearly 10,000 pieces of cultural relics, most of them produced in southeastern Fujian and Jiangxi provinces, were found.
The ship, with its six decks, reflects how advanced Chinese navigation was then.
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