Roberto Junco
Underwater Archaeologist, National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH)

Roberto Junco
Underwater Archaeologist
National Institute of Anthropology and History (INAH)
Mexico City, Mexico
Waitt Expeditions:
Mexico: Lost Fleet (Surveyor)
Biography
Roberto Junco took his first archaeology class as an elective during his undergraduate BA degree at the American University of Paris, France. After living briefly in Bolivia and Brazil, he returned to Mexico to begin a one and a half year preparation program to enroll in the Masters Program of Archaeology, at the National School of Anthropology and History. While completing his degree, in 2003, he began collaborating with the office in charge of underwater cultural patrimony in Mexico, the Vice-Directorate of Underwater Archaeology at the National Institute of Anthropology and History. Among the projects in which he has worked are underwater archaeological surveys in Baja California, Campeche, Veracruz, and underwater site recordings in Campeche and Guerrero. In 2007 he co-directed a project at the lagoons of the volcano Nevado de Toluca.
He has written on diverse topics such as Chinese porcelain, Historical Archaeology and Spanish navigation during colonial times. He is currently working at the Subdirección de Arqueología Subacuática/INAH, planning potential survey areas for the lost Spanish galleons of the Flota de Nueva España 1630-31, as well as working in the lagoons of the Volcano Nevado de Toluca at 4200 meters above sea level, among other tasks. Roberto Junco began diving at the age of 12 and today is an extended range diver. He is also interested in rare and old books.










