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French Navy’s deep-sea ops accidentally reveal shipwreck from 1500s

French Navy’s deep-sea ops accidentally reveal shipwreck from 1500s
Source: interestingengineering
Author: @IntEngineering
Published: 6/13/2025

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A French Navy underwater drone operating near Saint-Tropez has discovered the deepest shipwreck ever found in French territorial waters, resting at a depth of 2,567 meters (8,200 feet). The wreck, provisionally named Camarat 4, is a remarkably well-preserved 16th-century Italian merchant vessel from the Renaissance period. Measuring about 30 meters long and 7 meters wide, the ship was initially detected by sonar and later explored with remotely operated vehicles (ROVs), revealing an intact cargo including nearly 200 Ligurian ceramic jugs, iron bars, artillery pieces, an anchor, and yellow-glazed plates. Despite some contamination from modern debris like plastic bottles and fishing nets, the archaeological significance remains exceptional. The ship likely originated from Liguria, northern Italy, as indicated by the ceramic artifacts bearing mid-16th-century Ligurian motifs and the vessel’s design consistent with Ligurian or Genoese merchant ships. Such vessels were integral to Italy’s Renaissance-era

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robotunderwater-droneremotely-operated-vehiclemaritime-archaeologyshipwreck-discoverymarine-technologydeep-sea-exploration