THURSDAY, 19th FRIDAY, 20th SATURDAY, 21st SUNDAY, 22nd

THURSDAY, 19th
FRIDAY, 20th
Maritime Cyprus
In the Footsteps of
Honor Frost
SATURDAY, 21st
Maritime Cultural
Landscape
Maritime Cultural
Landscape
Maritime
Archaeological
Management
Conservation and
Archaeological
Science
SUNDAY, 22nd
Connected by the Sea
Connected by the
Sea
New Technologies
and Maritime
Archaeology
MONDAY, 23rd
TUESDAY,
24th
Ports, Harbours and
Anchorages in the
Ancient
Mediterranean: New
Discoveries and New
Approaches
Ports, Harbours and
Anchorages in the
Ancient
Mediterranean: New
Discoveries and New
Approaches
Trip
In the Footsteps of
Honor Frost
In the Footsteps of
Honor Frost – Panel
Discussion
Keynote Lecture by
Patrice Pomey
Welcome
Reception –
Speech by S.
Basch
Reception
Maritime Cultural
Landscape
Shipwrecks
Maritimity: Between
Land and Sea
Shipwrecks
Ship Construction in
the Ancient
Mediterranean:
Methods, Driving
Factors, and CrossCultural Exchange
New Technologies
and Maritime
Archaeology
Ship Construction in the Ancient
Mediterranean: Methods, Driving Factors,
and Cross-Cultural Exchange
Ports, Harbours and
Anchorages in the
Ancient
Mediterranean: New
Discoveries and New
Approaches
Closing Session
Conference Dinner
Maritime Cyprus
Laina Swiny, Justin Leidwanger
For millennia, Cyprus served as a strategic nexus for seaborne communication and exchange between the Near East and Mediterranean worlds. At the
same time, this connectivity brought the island into the broader orbit of a world that sought to capitalize on its resources. Cyprus' relationship to the sea
thus became a defining feature of its landscape and history from antiquity, when its name was synonymous with copper, up to the present. Through
diachronic case studies, this session explores how Cyprus' reliance on the sea for resources and connections has left an indelible mark on the island's
unique culture.
Author
Michalis Antonakis, Nikola Babucic, Sławomir Chwałek,
Marcin Frączek, Tomasz Kalicki, Piotr Kusztal, Łukasz
Miszk, Wojciech Ostrowski, Ewdoksia Papuci-Władyka,
Martina Seifert, Weronika Winiarska
Jean-Yves Empereur
Simon James, Ferréol Salomon, Lucy Blue, Calian Hazell,
Cécile Vittori
John Leonard
James D. Muhly
Title
Paphos’ harbours revisited. Results of interdisciplinary research of the Paphos Agora Project
The Hellenistic port Amathus, Cyprus: archaeology, history and publication
Investigations into the ancient port at Dreamer’s Bay and the maritime environment of the
Akrotiri peninsula, Cyprus
Ports, politics and pirates: the dynamic, potentially perilous maritime landscape of ancient
Northern Cyprus and the sinking of the Kyrenia Ship
Cyprus and Mediterranean trade in copper oxhide ingots
In the Footsteps of Honor Frost
Francis Martine Allouche, Elena Flavia Castagnino Berlinghieri
This session is dedicated to Honor Frost, her life and her legacy. The conference is held on the anniversary of the centenary of Honor Frost's birth and as such
seeks to reflect on her extraordinary life by taking a retrospective view of her work and the specific research themes that she explored, developed and in
many cases pioneered, through the course of her career as a maritime archaeologist.
The title of the session outlines it's objective, to explore the development of maritime archaeology through the lens of specific aspects of Honor Frost's
research such as harbours, anchors, shipwrecks and coastal change, to see how she inspired subsequent research and researchers, and helped develop the
discipline. Her work will also be investigated through the regional contexts in which she worked, exploring specific projects and research angles that she
initiated, and reflect on how maritime archaeology has subsequently changed in these areas since those early pioneering days,
The session is thus a celebration of the life of a remarkable person and the contribution she made to scholarship in the development of maritime archaeology
in the eastern Mediterranean and beyond.
Author
Title
Pietro Alagna
David Blackman
Mission of the Punic Ship
New perspectives in harbour research
Claire Calcagno, Elena Flavia Castagnino Berlinghieri
The Second Life of a Phoenix: Honor Frost's Unpublished Chronicles of a Punic Ship in Sicily
Nicolas Carayon
The impact of Honor Frost on Phoenician ports studies in the Levant
Jean-Yves Empereur
Honor Frost and the Alexandria Lighthouse
Rossella Giglio
Nicolas Grimal, Martine Francis-Allouche
Elpida Hadjidaki
Ibrahim Noureddine
Nadine Panayot Haroun, Lucy Semaan
Crystal el Safadi, Naseem Raad, Ziad Morsy, Lucy
Semaan, Dorothy Chakra
Harry Tzalas
Gregory F. Votruba, Osman Erkurt
The history of Marsala's shipwreck exhibition from the beginning to the present
Honoring the Lady of Byblos
Three decades of adventures with Honor Frost
Harbour installations at Tyre north
Preserving the landscape of Anfeh: From Nature to Culture
From One to Many: How Honor Frost’s legacy shapes scholars
1985 – 2008: The “Tropis” Symposia on Ship Construction in Antiquity
Building upon Honor Frost’s stone anchor foundations: typology, experimentation, spatial
analysis and future prospects for anchor studies
Maritime Cultural Landscape
Dorit Sivan, Helen Farr
This session seeks to bring together papers from across the Mediterranean that address the developing maritime landscape, from various time periods
ranging from earliest prehistory onwards. Discussions on cultural maritime landscapes of the past need to be contextualized with an understanding of the
physical landscape; new research on coastal geomorphology, sea-level change and the evidence for coastal and submerged archaeology on the coast and
the shallow shelf will be brought together to inform us about how this region has changed through time, and how this has influenced cultural activity within
it.
Author
Michael Artzy, Christophe Morhange, Matthieu Giaime,
A. Abu-Hamid, H. Jol, G.I. López, A.K. Killebrew, J.
Quartermaine
Nena Galanidou, Dimitris Sakellariou, Alexandra
Zavitsanou, Grigoris Rousakis
Title
Coastline, river changes and their effects on anchorages / harbors and habitation patterns:
Akko (Israel) as an example
Ehud Galili, Jonathan Benjamin, Deborah Cvikel, Danni
Rosenberg
Matthieu Giaime, Christophe Morhange, Nick Marriner,
Matteo Vacchi, Cau Miguel Angel, Fornós Joan J.
Submerged Neolithic villages on the Carmel coast, Israel
Beverly Goodman
Christophe Morhange, Nick Marriner, David Kaniewski
Ancient harbors and the impact of tsunamis: the case of Caesarea Maritima
Geoarchaeology of natural hazards in ancient harbours anthropogenic impacts versus neocatatrophism: the GEOMED-AMIDEX project
Marine geophysical implication in the ancient harbor of Byblos, Lebanon
George Papatheodorou, Maria Geraga, N. Georgiou, D.
Christodoulou, X. Demas, Martine Francis-Allouche, N.
Grimal
Miltiadis Polidorou, Niki Evelpidou
Dimitris Sakellariou, F. Anselmetti, J. Beck, D.
Koutsoumba, Alexandra Zavitsanou, M. Surdez, I.
Panagiotopoulos, I. Morfis
Exploring the submerged prehistoric landscapes of the Inner Ionian Sea Archipelago, Greece
Geoarchaeological investigations on the Roman harbour of Pollentia (Bay of Alcúdia, Mallorca,
Spain)
Coastal Palaeogeography of Akrotiri Peninsula, Cyprus
Late Pleistocene to Holocene submerged shorelines and landscapes off Franchthi Cave,
Greece
Gilad Shtienberg, Justin K. Dix, Ruth Shahack-Gross, Assaf
Yasur-Landaua, Joel Roskin, Revital Bookman, Nicolas
Waldmann, Sariel Shalev, Dorit Sivan
Elias Spondylis, Vasiliki Ivrou
Anthropogenic overprints on natural coastal aeolian sediments, a case study from the
periphery of ancient Caesarea, Israel
Michele Stefanile
Fishponds and maritime structures in the Roman villae maritimae: new data from the
Southern Latium Underwater Survey
T. Theodoulou, N. Papadopoulos, K. Simyrdanis, G.
Cantoro
Athena Trakadas
Geo-archaeological investigation at the submerged relics of ancient Olous (Crete). 2015 Preliminary results
The maritime cultural riverscape of ports along North Africa’s Atlantic façade
Konstantinos Vouvalidis, G. Syrides, O. Koukousioura, K.
Kouli, G. Karadimou, P. Tsourlos, E. Aidona, D.
Terzopoulou, N. Arrington, M. Tasaklaki, T. Tartaron, Ch.
Domakinis
Mari Yamasaki
Mantha Zarmakoupi, Magdalini Athanasoula
Locating the Ancient Stryme in the changing paleogeography of the Thracian Coast (N. Aegean
Sea, Greece).
Metohi: an underwater Middle Helladic site in Pagasitikos Gulf. Central Greece: remarks
communications
Cognitive coastscapes in the archaeological context
The Delos Underwater Survey Project (2014-2016)
Maritime Archaeological Management
Athena Trakadas, Nadine Panagiot
Common to most Mediterranean and Near Eastern countries, the recent century has seen massive-scale development projects which are dramatically altering
the coastal and near-shore environmental and sociological landscapes of these areas. The deterioration and loss of such intrinsic heritage can negatively
impact communities, affecting their cultural identity as well as their potential for socio-economic growth through sustainable eco-tourism, urban renewal,
and living standards. Thus, academic archaeologists need more than ever to integrate into their research designs proper management of underwater and
maritime-oriented sites and their cultural conservation. Surveys and assessments of maritime landscapes are needed in order to support marine protection
and management and to provide for the protection of marine heritage assets, especially those at risk from neglect, decay or other threats.
This session will focus on the presentation of different solutions for the archaeological enhancement of the maritime landscape and the introduction of new
methodologies to enable this. The objective is to strengthen the capacity of archaeologists to set basic paradigms to create a better basis for sustainable
management decisions of the cultural heritage in order to realize wider social, cultural, economic and environmental benefits.
Author
Ofra Barkai, Oded Katz, Amit Mushkin and Beverly N.
Goodman-Tchernov
Title
Long-term retreat rates of Israel’s Mediterranean Sea cliffs inferred from reconstruction of
eroded archaeological sites
Katerina Dellaporta
Barbara Euser
From jus naufragii and lex rhodia to Unesco Convention 2001; the protection of maritime
heritage of the Mediterranean Sea from a historical and management approach
Ancient shipwreck sites in the Eastern Mediterranean: revealing the fragments of their
biographies in the present
A strategic protection scheme for the submerged bronze age town at pavlopetri
Massimiliano Secci
Petra Zdravkovic
Maritime archaeological management in Italy: skeleton-first or shell-first construction?
Montenegrin coast - challenges and potentials of maritime archaeological management
Anna Demetriou
Conservation and Archaeological Science
Sturt Manning, Eleni Loizidou
This session seeks to bring together researchers and practitioners – both established and early career – working actively in research and applications of
conservation and other archaeological science approaches in the discovery, analysis, recording, conservation and preservation of the maritime cultural
heritage of the Mediterranean region. Papers that discuss innovative approaches, new ways of approaching materials and problems, reassessments of past
work, and solutions to issues of wider Mediterranean relevance are especially welcome.
Author
Carlos Jimenez, Katerina Achilleos, Louis Hadjioanou,
Antonis Petrou
Asaf Oron, Nili Liphschitz, Gideon Hadas, Benjamin Held,
Raphael Linker, Robert Blanchette
Ruth Shahack-Gross, Isaac Ogloblin, Assaf Yasur-Landau
Marina Šimičić
Guy Sisma-Ventura, Irit Zohar, Thomas Tütken, Andreas
Pack, Dorit Sivan, Omri Lernau, Ayelet Gilboa, Guy Bar Oz
Marios Konstantinos Vaziourakis , Angeliki Nikitidou,
Maria Elissavet Thomadaki, Stella Demesticha, Chrysanthi
Papadopoulou, Ioannis Iliopoulos, Spiros Sergiou, Pavlos
Megalovasilis, George Papatheodorou, Maria Geraga
Title
Understanding life on the pot: marine biofouling and wreck-site formation processes of the
Kyrenia shipwreck (Cyprus)
Dead vs. Med.; characterization of waterlogged wood finds from the Dead Sea and the
Mediterranean
Post-Depositional underwater processes in ceramics found in an oxygenated Eenvironment at
the Byzantine anchorage of Dor, Israel.
The early Croatian boats at Nin - repair and reconservation begins
The exploitation of Eastern Mediterranean coastal resources: new insights from phosphate
oxygen isotopes (δ18OP) of archeological fish teeth
Studies on the sedimentological regime of the Mazotos ancient shipwreck, offshore Cyprus
Shipwrecks
Carlo Beltrame, Deborah Cvikel
A shipwreck is a moment frozen in time – capturing physical evidence of the structure of the ship, its cargo and trade route, seamanship and daily life on
board. Underwater archaeology and shipwreck recording can yield a wealth of information that is unobtainable through the study of traditional sources, as
well as provide details that non-archaeological sources can rarely supply. Our session will be dedicated to underwater excavation and research of shipwrecks
and their artefacts.
Author
Christos Agouridis, Myrto Michalis
Xanthie Argiris
Title
The arduous voyage of underwater research during the recovery of the LBA shipwreck off
Modi Islet
Two shipwrecks from Leipsoi and Arkioi islands
Cristina Bazzano, Timmy Gambin, R. La Rocca
Mixed cargoes in the western Mediterranean during the late Antiquity: the “Messina 1”
shipwreck
Carlo Beltrame
Peter Campbell, Georgos Koutsouflakis
Maayan Cohen
Stella Demesticha
The routes of the marble. Transportation of white marbles in the Mediterranean
Evidence of ancient trade from the Fourni Archipelago, Greece
The Maʻagan Mikhael B shipwreck: preliminary report
The maritime transport containers of the Mazotos shipwreck: typology, metrology and
stowage
Marie-Pierre Jézégou, Patrick Andersch Goodfellow,
Jonathan Letuppe, Corinne Sanchez
A wreck of late antiquity discovered in a bank of the port channel of Narbonne (France)
Mark E. Polzer
A moveable feast…and lead? The Bajo de la Campana Phoenician shipwreck and implications
for the Orientalising process on the Iberian Peninsula
Ship 11 from Thonis-Heracleion, Egypt: boat sacrifice within an Osirian sacred lake
Damian Robinson, Franck Goddio
Maritimity: Between Land and Sea
Lucy Blue, Julian Whitewright
This session aims to explore the boundaries of maritime space through practises identified via a variety of sources and acquired through a variety of
methodologies. It examines the liminality of maritime space and explores maritime practise as transition between land and sea. Besides the more practical,
tangible characteristics of maritime space and practise, less obvious, intangible aspects are also explored. Water bodies are explored in their provision of
shelter, as points of transition, places on the fringe. Maritime space is viewed from a variety of perspectives, warfare, trade, agriculture and religion, on
land and sea. Aspects of ritual and religion, sanctuaries and cult-place are examined in relation to maritime activities and connectivity all integral to an
appreciation of maritime cultures, practise, seafaring, and landscape in antiquity.
Author
Martin Eckert
Title
The Aphrodite of Seafarers and her sanctuaries around the Mediterranean
Aurora Higueras-Milena Castellano
An embracing seaport beyond the Pillars of Heracles
Linda Hulin, Senta German
Julian Jansen van Rensburg
Up from the sea: mariner cultural worlds in the Late Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean
In recorded memory: intangible maritime cultural heritage management of the Anfeh Seafaring
Community, Lebanon
The Kastro coastal rock-cut site (Myrina, island of Lemnos): metaphorical, representational and
tangible maritime aspects
The Ploiaphasia/Navigium Isidis: a possible modern continuation?
Christina Marangou
Shelley Wachsmann
Connected by the Sea
Timmy Gambin, Bernard Knapp
Seafaring is a mode of travel, a way to traverse maritime space that enables not only the transport of goods and materials but also of people and ideas —
communicating and sharing knowledge across the sea and between different lands. The world of ancient Mediterranean seafaring and seafarers was complex,
involving a number of different peoples in multiple networks of economic and social exchange. But is it possible to trace the origins and emergence of these
ancient trade networks? How did they change through time? Can we discuss at any reasonable level who was involved in prehistoric maritime ventures? Who
built the early ships in which maritime trade was conducted, and who captained them? Who sailed them? Which ports and harbours were the most propitious
for maritime trade? What other evidence exists for seafaring, fishing, the exploitation of marine resources and related maritime matters? To what extent did
early seafarers develop their own rituals and can we speak of 'religions or ideology of maritime mobility'? Are such factors reflected in a 'cultic' landscape
and, if so, how were such landscapes perceived from out at sea ('seascapes')?
The papers in this session seek to address these and other, related questions by examining a wide range of material, documentary, iconographic and/or
ethnographic evidence, and by re-examining current interpretations. Because the social aspects of seafaring, the relationship different peoples had with the
sea, and the whole notion of 'seascapes' are all too seldom discussed in the literature of the Mediterranean, this session aims to devote attention to such
factors, including: voyaging, mobility, connectivity, migration, the length and purpose as well as the risk of the journey, the knowledge and experience of
navigation, the impact of distance and access to the exotic upon peoples' identities and ideologies, and much more.
Author
Ezra Marcus, Paula Weiman-Barak
Carmen Obied
Crystal Safadi
Title
Maritime connections and cultural repercussions along coastal Languedoc during pre-Colonial
period (8th-6th B.C.)
Levantine connectivities
Between land and sea: ‘emporia’ and their archaeological remains
Mariners, maritime connectivity, and the ‘ritual’ of sea travel in Early Neolithic Cyprus
Piracy in the Late Bronze Age Eastern Mediterranean?
Making connectivity visible: a study in maritime interactions in the Eastern Mediterranean
from the Late Bronze Age to the Archaic period
Pre-Middle Bronze Age maritime exchange networks between the Aegean and the Levant: an
Anatolian perspective
Reconnecting the Maritime Levant at the Dawn of the Middle Bronze Age
Navigating perceptions: mariners and geographers of the Roman Levant
The maritime world of the Early Bronze Age Levant through space and time
Richard Takkou-Neofytou
Maritime identity on the edge of the palace: the islandscape of Bronze Age Zakynthos
Enrique Aragon
Gil Gambash, Paula Rut Zadok
Aylin Güngör
Duncan Howitt-Marshall
Bernard Knapp
Anja Krieger
Michele Massa
New Technologies and Maritime Archaeology
Dimitris Skarlatos, Jon Henderson
Optical and sonar based approaches are evolving fast in maritime archaeology. This session aims to take stock of current advances allowing a forum for
practitioners to come together and discuss the results of their projects, current problems and their hopes for the future. The session will include vision
based photogrammetry, data fusion approaches, virtual/ augmented and mixed reality applications, sonar, laser scanning and geophysical work. We are
interested in hearing from projects using ANY new types of technology from digital modeling to underwater and aerial platforms to more fully understand
maritime sites and present them to the public.
Author
Fabio Bruno, Loris Barbieri, Antonio Lagudi, Maurizio
Muzzupappa, Sebastiano Tusa, Alessandro Cozza,
Raffaele Peluso, Gerardo Ritacco
Elisa Costa, S. Manfio, S. Tusa
Jeremy Green, Patrick Baker
Isabelle Hairy
Michel L'Hour, Daniela Peloso, Franca Cibecchini, Denis
Degez, Vincent Creuze, Christophe Leclerc, Frédéric
Osada
Gunnar Liestøl, Elpida Hadjidaki
Madeline McAllister
William M. Murray
Nikos Papadopoulos, Gianluca Cantoro, Theotokis
Theodoulou, Julien Beck
Smiljko Rudan, Irena Radić Rossi
Title
Enhancing learning and access to underwater cultural heritage through digital technologies:
the case study of Cala Minnola, Sicily
Virtual reality and virtual dives among Sicilian stone cargos
The University of Oxford, Research Laboratory for Archaeology Cape Andreas Expeditions
1969–70, working with legacy data
The evolution of survey techniques on the Qaitbay underwater site at Alexandria, Egypt
The 3D technologies for the archaeology in the deep sea: the Danton French battleship
(Cagliari, Italy)
Experiences with mobile augmented reality at Phalasarna. Combining the present with the
past in situ
Seeing is believing: the rhetoric of image-based 3D digital models of underwater
archaeological sites
The RAM3D database project: a web portal for the study of ancient Mediterranean warships
and ramming
“Dive” in the past of ultra shallow marine archaeological sites in Eastern Mediterranean
through geoinformatics
Numerical simulation of the sinking ship scenario, based on the archaeological records
Ship Construction in the Ancient Mediterranean: Methods, Driving Factors, and Cross-Cultural Exchange
Cemal Pulak, Giulia Boetto
Ancient ship construction in the Mediterranean Sea and its surrounding regions is a complex, yet important, subject of study on which significant
advancements have been made over the past several decades. A focus on this subject is one of the most important legacies of TROPIS: International
Symposium on Ship Construction in Antiquity, which helped propel ancient ship construction as one of the main focuses of nautical archaeology in the
Mediterranean. The complexity of studying ancient ship- or boatbuilding is derived from its many distinct components, broadly divided into three
categories: developments in ship construction, their driving factors, and the cross-cultural exchange underlying those developments. Development in ship
construction encompasses several themes including theoretical, methodological, technological, and design advancements. These changes can take place
over short or long periods of time, and can also be examined through regional or geographic specific traditions. Understanding the interdependent
economic, political, social and geographical factors that directed developments in ship construction is as equally important as determining the
developments themselves. While difficult to quantify, the interplay between cultures cannot be understated in the development of ship construction in the
ancient Mediterranean. Following in the tradition of TROPIS, the Mediterranean Maritime Archaeology: Under the Mediterranean conference is calling for
papers on ancient ship construction in the Mediterranean and the surrounding regions as it relates to these components.
Author
Mohamed M. Abd-el-Maguid
Giulia Boetto, Chiara Zazzaro, Pierre Poveda
José L. Casabán, Irena Radić Rossi
Title
Where to situate Abu Rawash boat in the corpus of the ancient Egyptian boats
A preliminary study on shipwrecks Napoli E-H found in the ancient harbour of Naples, Italy
The San Girolamo shipwreck (1576): ongoing research on the hull design, outfitting, and
history of a 16th-century Ragusan nava
Deborah Cvikel
The Akko Tower Wreck, Israel: hull-construction report
Christopher J. Davey
Avner Hillman, Deborah Cvikel
George Koutsouflakis, Eric Rieth
Kevin Melia-Teevan
Emmanuel Nantet
The development of the Roman merchant ship sail-plan
The construction of Ma‘agan Mikhael II
A 12th century Byzantine shipwreck in the port of Rhodes
A study in framing development in the Mediterranean. From the 5th century B.C.E. Through
the 9th century C.E.
The tonnage of the Syracusia. A metrological reconsideration
Caroline Sauvage, Marie-Louise Nosch
The fabric of the sea – sail manufacture in the Late Bronze Age eastern Mediterranean
Ports, Harbours and Anchorages in the Ancient Mediterranean: New Discoveries and New Approaches
David Blackman, Kalliopi Baika
The importance of harbours as a base for navigation in the Ancient Mediterranean has been increasingly recognised in recent years. Collaboration with
geologists has added a new dimension, showing man's reaction to the challenges of constructing safe havens on often hostile shores. Reviews of the
contemporary literary and epigraphic evidence have been combined with the interpretation of new discoveries on the shore and under water.
Following in the tradition of TROPIS, papers are welcomed on new discoveries and new approaches to the evidence which is now being revealed: for example
the evidence that harbour studies offer with respect to our understanding of ship construction and maintenance; the distinction between civil and military
harbours; harbour networks; the provision of storage and the identification of features such as water supply; evidence of multicultural features; the threats
of natural catastrophes and the human reaction to such catastrophes; and the contribution to harbour studies by scientists using new analytical and dating
methods.
Author
Patricia Antaki
Pascal Arnaud
Kalliopi Baika, D. Evangelistis, J. Pakkanen
Souen Fontaine, Mourad El-Amouri, Frédéric Marty,
Corinne Rousse
Daniela Giampaola, Vittoria Carsana
Thomas Hillard, Lea Beness
Robert Hohlfelder
Michael Jones, Rebecca Ingram
Simon Keay, Pascal Arnaud
Mustafa Koçak, Erkan Dündar
Yannos G. Lolos, Angeliki Simossi
Dan Mirkin, Deborah Cvikel, Oren Tal
Title
Fortified Crusader harbours of the Syro-Lebanese-Palestinian coast
Limen kleïstos: fortified ports and their evolution from the Peloponnesian war down to the
age of Augustus
Underwater excavations and interdisciplinary research in the ancient and Medieval Harbour
of Kyllene/Glarentza (Nw Peloponnese, Greece)
The submerged monumental complex of the roman harbour system of Fossae Marianae (Gulf
of Fos, South of France)
The excavation of the ancient harbour of Naples (piazza Municipio 2004-2016)
Looking for the harbour of classical Torone: underwater exploration and geophysical
prospection
Enhancing the Roman Imperial maritime infrastructure: Nero’s deeds and dreams
The rock-cut shoreline features on Dana Island and the maritime landscape of the Taşucu Gulf
(Rough Cilicia)
Port, place or complex system? Rethinking Roman Mediterranean ports in the light of the
Portuslimen (RoMP) Project
New surveys at the Patara Harbor: an overview on the harbor defense systems
Salamis Harbour Project, 2016-2017
Crusader mooring: a view from Arsur (Israel)
Thomas Ross, Alexandra Villing
Thomas Schmidts
The harbour of Naukratis: the Mistress of Ships’ 2012-2017
Ainos: a harbour city and hub in the Northern Aegean
Jacob Sharvit, Bridget Buxton
The Hellenistic harbour of Akko. Summary of the 2008-2014 excavation seasons
Cabrera Tejedor
Ida Koncani Uhač
The Roman port of Hispalis (Seville)
Roman ports of Istria (Croatia)
Assaf Yasur-Landau, Ehud Arkin, Ayelet Gilboa, Ruth
Shahack-Gross, Ilan Sharon
Underwater excavations in the South Bay of Dor and the development of harbors in the
Eastern Mediterranean