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The National Geographic Society/Waitt Grants Program helps qualified and experienced individuals launch the most difficult stage of a project for which to secure funding—the search. Grants are made for exploratory fieldwork that holds promise for new breakthroughs in the natural and social sciences. NGS/Waitt Grants applications are processed throughout the year and grants are awarded expeditiously to help researchers take advantage of immediate opportunities. The NGS/Waitt grants are an initiative of the National Geographic Society and the Waitt Institute.

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Albania: Ancient Shipwreck

3rd Century BCE Shipwreck

albania023 Survey Location: Albania

Dates: August 15-25, 2008

Co-Principal Investigators

Dr. Nicolle Hirschfeld
Assistant Professor of Classical Studies
Trinity University

Dr. Adriani Anastasi
Professor of Archaeology
University of Tirana

In Collaboration With
RPM Nautical Foundation
Albanian Institute of Archaeology (AIA)

Expedition Background

Sometime early in the third century BCE, a ship carrying a cargo of amphoras wrecked near a rocky shore on the Albanian coastline.  These ancient ceramic vases will break upon impact, but do not disintegrate once they have come to rest on the sea floor. This durability has left them as the sole witnesses to many ancient shipwrecks, and the stories they have to tell have transformed our understanding of history.

During an underwater survey in July of 2007, conducted by the RPM Nautical Foundation, researchers discovered a grouping of these amphoras resting on the seabed. About forty of them remain visible above the accumulating sand.

Expedition Summary
The Waitt Institute and RPM Nautical Foundation teamed up for this reconnaissance mission and invited Dr. Nicolle Hirschfeld to lead the research team. The goal of the 10-day expedition was to evaluate the potential of this shipwreck for archaeological excavation. The research team dived the wreck site in order to examine the seabed topography, to identify the area of scatter, and to confirm or revise the initial report of the types, quantity, and preservation of the finds.

The accomplished recon provided insight for planning an excavation project for the site, including a determination of the equipment, funds, and personnel that will be needed to excavate, record, and conserve the finds properly.  At the same time, Dr. Hirschfeld acted as an ambassador for the proposed project to various Albanian officials, educators, and students, with the hope of exciting interest in a collaborative enterprise and to learn of available facilities and expertise.

The Waitt Institute’s long-term goal for this project is to participate as a catalyst in the development of a sustainable program of cultural resource management of the maritime heritage of Albania, conducted by and for the Albanians. A secondary goal is to broaden the American student perspective of the people and history of the Balkans.

Expedition Team Members

Dr. Nicolle Hirschfeld, Co-Principal Investigator
Trinity University

Dr. Adriani Anastasi, Co-Principal Investigator
University of Tirana

Joe Lepore, Director of Dive Operations
Waitt Institute

Derek Smith
Scientific Diver/Hyperbaric Chamber Technician
University of Hawaii

Ardiola Alikaj, Translator/Archaeologist
University of Tirana

Liz Smith, Diver/Videographer
Waitt Institute

From the Expedition Leader Dr. Nicolle Hirschfeld

When I was in high school, one of the reasons I decided to become an archaeologist was that I wanted to travel and explore the world, especially the parts of it that are very different from the places I know.  My career so far has offered me more than I ever would have imagined: years of living in Greece, Turkey, and Cyprus, participating in excavations throughout the Aegean, the Levant and Egypt, and exploring museum storerooms all over Europe.  And now, just when I have gotten comfortable in those orbits, chance has opened the door to Albania.  Once again, a new and strange and exotic land lies ahead.  Last night I learned that the official currency of Albania is the lek, which is subdivided into 100 quindarka.  What could be more unfamiliar?  I feel like Dorothy about to step into Oz.  I expect to encounter every bit as much of magic, different ways of doing things, and new-yet-familiar friends.