The Uluburun Shipwreck: A Bronze Age Time Capsule of Ten Cultures

In 1982, a Turkish sponge diver spotted strange shapes on the Mediterranean seafloor that looked like giant metal biscuits with ears. Those biscuits led to one of the most monumental archaeological discoveries of the 20th century, a wooden ship that sank in the late 14th century BCE.

This episode explores the Uluburun shipwreck, a breathtaking snapshot of a thriving Late Bronze Age trade network. With cargo from nine or ten distinct cultures, it shatters the illusion of an isolated ancient world and reveals an era of standardized industry, royal gift-giving, and multicultural crews moving wealth across the open sea.

  • The recovery took 11 campaigns and 22,413 individual dives between 1984 and 1994, with divers limited to about 20 minutes a day at depths past 170 feet
  • The cargo held 10 tons of Cypriot copper and one ton of tin in the exact 10-to-1 ratio needed to forge 11 tons of bronze; the tin’s origin sparked a fierce scientific debate over Uzbekistan versus Sardinia
  • 149 Canaanite jars mostly held pistachio resin, and around 175 cobalt-blue glass ingots are the earliest intact ones ever found, chemically matched to Egyptian and Mycenaean goods
  • Personal items included a folding boxwood writing tablet and a cylinder seal carved in the 18th century BC and recut 400 years later
  • A gold scarab bearing Queen Nefertiti’s name, combined with Bayesian radiocarbon dating, secured a sinking date around 1320 BC near the end of the Amarna period

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