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In Istanbul, A Byzantine-Era Fleet Surfaces Again

RACHEL MARTIN, HOST:

In Istanbul, Turkey, construction on major public transit projects is underway after years of delay. The problem there wasn't lack of financing but the layer upon layer of ancient artifacts that tend to turn up every time the earthmovers get started. NPR's Peter Kenyon has the story of one dig along the city's southern shore. It's uncovered what experts say is a staggering array of artifacts from pre-Ottoman Constantinople.

PETER KENYON, BYLINE: I won't go on about how awful Istanbul traffic can be. Suffice to say that on my initial reporting trip here I missed my first appointment - by an hour and a half. So, when a tunnel under the Bosphorus Strait and the rail and subway network that will connect to it were stopped in their tracks several years ago, eyes rolled and shoulders shrugged. Istanbul is after all one of those places, like Rome, Athens and Jerusalem, where this kind of thing tends to happen a lot. But local frustrations were soon overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of what was being so carefully lifted from the mud along the Sea of Marmara. Millions of pottery shards, animals bones, horses, elephants - 60 species in all. And many other remnants of the booming trade done here in the middle ages, when this dog-eared Istanbul neighborhood was the glorious port of Theodosius;, to here the world's rarities arrived at Constantinople, the eastern flank of the Roman Empire. For archaeologist Ofuk Kocabas from Istanbul University, it's the find of a lifetime.

OFUK KOCABAS: Up to now, we found 26 shipwrecks. This is the world's biggest shipwreck collection ever found. I can say, you know, their protection state is wonderful.

KENYON: With the transit projects back on track behind him after years of delay, Kocabas shows a visitor the timbers from the Byzantine vessels, now resting in huge tanks where fresh water is slowly circulating, leeching the salt from the ancient wood. It's a process that will take years, during which time Kocabas says the wood must be protected from new enemies, such as a bacteria and mosquito larvaes.

KOCABAS: That's why we are adding some biocides inside. Also, we are using goldfish. They are really efficient to larvae of mosquito. They like to eat this larvae.

KENYON: The Istanbul Archaeological Museum is in overall charge of the project with Kocabas and his colleagues taking care of the ships. They range from small cargo boats to mighty Byzantine naval vessels that helped break two Arab sieges and repelled other would-be conquerors.

KOCABAS: In that time, their navy was really strong, because they invented Greek fire.

KENYON: A History Channel documentary about ancient warfare sought to explain this terrifying weapon that spit flames that burnt even in water.

(SOUNDBITE OF DOCUMENTARY)

KENYON: It will take years to preserve and reconstruct the Byzantine fleet and a new museum will be needed to display the vast trove of medieval finds. By which time Istanbul commuters may be humming along under the new Bosphorus tunnel or clinging to straps on a new subway line. I'm betting that traffic will still be miserable, but archaeologists will be watching this very pro-development government's other projects, such as the new excavation under central Taksim Square to see what wonders may await in this history-soaked corner of the world. Peter Kenyon, NPR News, Istanbul.

(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC)

MARTIN: You're listening to NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

Peter Kenyon is NPR's international correspondent based in Istanbul, Turkey.
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