ARCHAEOLOGY Subscribe! Special Introductory Offer
Renew Subscription
Buy Back Issues
Give a Gift Subscription
A publication of the Archaeological Institute of America
 
Email this article
feature
Ship C "A Cache of Vintage Ships"
Volume 52 Number 4, July/August 1999

Technicians apply protective fiberglass shell to ship C.

The third, ship C, survives for a length of about 20 feet, including several beams (timbers running from side to side) in addition to the planking and framing. Along one of the beams is a graffito reading "O D A [?] ...," now meaningless but perhaps a product of some Roman mariner's idle hours. From one gunwale a thole pin still protrudes, the ancient equivalent of an oarlock, consisting of a wooden peg to which an oar would have been loosely fastened with a loop of rope. When I was in Pisa, Icnos was giving ship C its fiberglass shell: Technicians had covered the wood with large sheets of clear plastic, inserting foam rubber pads in spaces between pieces of wood where the fiberglass could not fit. In a process recalling the make-a-piñata papier-mâché projects of grade-school art class (but much more precise), they were layering one-foot squares of fiberglass cloth three or four thick over the plastic, painting them with liquid resin to hold them together. As the resin dries, it creates a hard shell capable of maintaining the ship's shape during transportation.  cont.

Inscription "O D A [?]..."

Thole pin (ancient equivalent of oarlock)

Conservator paints fiberglass square with resin.

Introduction | Ship A | Ship B | Ship C | Ship D | Other Ships | A New Museum?

-----
© 1999 by the Archaeological Institute of America
www.archaeology.org/9907/etc/shipc.html

Share this page:



del.icio.us  StumbleUpon

Share

E-Update

Stay up-to-date on news and
new features on our website.
Click here to sign up.

Buy current & back issues:

ARCHAEOLOGY back issues
See what's available!

current issue
Current Issue

online content

Exclusive Features
Taft Blackhorse & John Stein, Uncanny Archaeology, The Newark Earthworks

Latest News
Daily archaeological headlines

Interactive Digs
Zominthos, Crete; El Carrizal, Mexico; Sagalassos, Turkey

On Site
Voyage to Crete, Picturing the Holy Land

Reviews
"Becoming Human," "Discovering Ardi," "Magic in Ancient Egypt"

Interviews
Richard Leakey, Edward Bleiberg, Andrew Edwards

Privacy Policy - Contact Us - Advertise
© 2010 Archaeological Institute of America
Website by Castle Builder Design
Hosting donated by Hurricane Electric
he.net