Bid to find lost Persian armada
Originally at: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/3401449.stm
By Paul Rincon
BBC News Online science staff
The jar that contained the sauroter was also home to an octopus
Archaeologists have embarked on an epic search for an ancient fleet
of Persian ships that was destroyed in a violent storm off Greece in
492 BC.
The team will search for sunken remains of the armada - sent by Persian
king Darius to invade Greece - which was annihilated before reaching
its target. 
Waters off Mount Athos in northern Greece, the site of the disaster,
have yielded two helmets and a spear-butt.
Experts will return to the site in June to look for more remains of
the fleet.
"This is an extraordinarily target-rich area for ancient shipwrecks,"
Dr Robert Hohlfelder, a maritime archaeologist at the University of
Colorado, Boulder, US, told BBC News Online.
The amphoras presumably come from a shipwreck 
"Usually, when shipwrecks are found, the archaeologists are asked
to create the history around them. We have the history, now we've got
to find the shipwrecks."
Historical cue
An account of the 492 BC disaster is related in The Histories, by the
5th Century BC Greek writer Herodotus. He says the ships were smashed
against Mount Athos.
Last year, the team discovered a shipwreck containing amphoras, pottery
containers used for transporting foodstuffs. How, if at all, this wreck
relates to the disaster is not known.
The archaeologists also found a bronze spear-butt, called a sauroter,
at a site where, in 1999, local fisherman raised two Greek classical
helmets from the seafloor.
The sauroter was found in the possession of an octopus, which had dragged
the spear-butt inside a jar in which it had made its sea-floor home.
The survey could help resolve arguments about how triremes - ancient
galley warships used by the Persians and Greeks - were constructed.
The sauroter, held by Katerina Dellaporta, fitted a spear 
Recycled boats
In trireme battles, victory hinged on slamming other ships with a heavy
bronze ram on the front of the ship.
Not a single trireme wreck has ever been found and archaeologists on
the survey are divided over the likelihood of finding one on this expedition.
"We will not find a trireme. They contained very little ballast
so they floated. Although the rams may have sunk," team member
Michael Wedde told BBC News Online.
Classical texts refer to triremes being rescued, towed to dry land
and repaired to be reused.
"There's some question over whether they sank," said Dr Shelley
Wachsmann of Texas A&M University in College Station, US. "Most
ships we find have cargoes because those bring them to the bottom,"
Archaeologists explored the ocean floor using a submersible 
But Dr Hohlfelder said there was a possibility a trireme could have
sunk to the sea bed: "Underwater archaeologists have wish lists.
A trireme is certainly one of the top ones on most people's lists. And
I think this is one of the best places to look for them."
It is also possible that supply ships - which supported the warships
- were carried to the bottom, weighed down by their cargoes.
The project is a collaboration between the Canadian Institute of Archaeology
and the Greek Archaeological Service.
Katerina Dellaporta, of the Ephorate of Underwater Antiquities in Greece,
and Dr Wachsmann are leading the research.
Around 20,000 men were lost in the disaster, which shook Persia at
a time when it had its sights on assimilating mainland Greece within
its empire.