Archaeonautica
eISSN - 2117-6973
Archaeonautica is aimed at researchers, archaeologists, historians, as well as specialists in maritime and nautical history and archaeology. Its mission is to publish studies in submarine and subaquatic archaeology, both French and foreign, from prehistory to the 19th century.
The journal was founded in 1977 in response to the lack of a specialist review in France that covered scientific themes on a larger scale than the simple excavation report. The chronological spread is wide since the intention is to cover all periods stretching from prehistory to the contemporary era: actual contributions run from protohistory up to modern times. Similarly, the geographic field is not strictly defined, although most of the work examined concerns the Mediterranean, European internal waterways with some articles looking at the eastern Atlantic seaboard.
A large part of the review is given over to publishing excavations of shipwrecks but the collection also includes more specific studies regarding nautical and harbour archaeology. Different aspects of economic and maritime history, as well as the history of attitudes are also tackled through analyses of literary, iconographic and technical sources.
Open Sea | Closed Sea. Local and Inter-Regional Traditions in Shipbuilding
Proceedings of the Fifteenth International Symposium on Boat and Ship Archaeology Marseilles 2018Mer Fermée | Mer Ouverte. Traditions locales et interrégionales dans la construction navale
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Crédits : Cliché L. Damelet (CNRS/AMU/CCJ)ISBN 978-2-271-12972-7
Preface [Texte intégral] To the memory of Patrice Pomey (1943-2021) [Texte intégral]À la mémoire de Patrice Pomey (1943-2021) [Texte intégral | traduction | fr]Open Sea | Closed Sea. Local and Inter-Regional Traditions in Shipbuilding
Ship Construction
Hull characteristics of the Yenikapı 16 galley [Texte intégral] The hopper barges of Marseilles [Texte intégral]Inland Ship Construction
Recent Discoveries
A Roman ship scuttled near Salona in the Gulf of Kaštela, Croatia [Texte intégral] The Grande Passe 1 shipwreck, 2nd century BC, Hyères, France [Texte intégral]New data on its cargo, nautical equipment and wooden remains A Byzantine period merchant ship from the Black Sea [Texte intégral] The Paragan 1 shipwreck, Corsica: a 17th–18th century coaster [Texte intégral] The medieval shipwreck from Kalverev Syd, Denmark [Texte intégral]Nautical Ethnography
Bark canoes: sewing, lashing and folding [Texte intégral]Studies on Wood
The Bremen-Cog: environmental issues [Texte intégral] Timber supply for Vasa: new discoveries [Texte intégral] Sailing Ma‘agan Mikhael II [Texte intégral] Reconstruction of the Byzantine shipwreck Yenikapı 12 [Texte intégral]Research Methods
The Bremen-Cog: reconstructed one more time [Texte intégral] Computational fluid dynamics: floating a digital Barcode 02 [Texte intégral]Posters
Artistic and symbolic elements of the Maltese luzzu [Texte intégral] What influenced British East Indiamen ship design? [Texte intégral] Ships of the western Indian Ocean in Persian manuscript paintings [Texte intégral] The Tallinn cog : smart conservation [Texte intégral] Ship shapes: digitising historic ship models [Texte intégral] South and north: the linguistic mysteries of the buss [Texte intégral]
- 20 | 2018
De re navali : Pérégrinations nautiques entre Méditerranée et océan Indien- 19 | 2017
L’archéologie maritime et navale de la préhistoire à l’époque contemporaineTous les numéros
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