Sending a belated Happy Birthday wish to our expert Dr. Peter Campbell, the brilliant Maritime Archaeologist! 🌊⚓️
We hope you're diving into a great celebration! May your day be as exciting as discovering a hidden shipwreck. Cheers!
@petercampbell.bsky.social
Posts by Peter Campbell
Thanks Nigel!
It’s in a high traffic area for the port, so diving is quite challenging with large vessels going by. It’s also low visibility, so it’s hard to get a sense of the whole wreck. But they’ve used a lot of high tech methods to map it.
The current underwater archaeological research on the shipwreck is brilliant, led by Jorge Herrera
National Geographic goes behind the scenes with @petercampbell.bsky.social as part of an OSCE investigation into the seizure of some 200 Cambodian, Bactrian, and Gandharan antiquities that were "roughly removed" from archeological sites.
www.nationalgeographic.com/history/arti...
Over the years, I wrote parts of two books there and we had film production meetings there. Right after the COVID lockdown I had the place almost entirely to myself. 265 years is a good run though.
Caffè Greco 1760-2025. One of the oldest coffee houses in Europe has closed, which served historical figures such as Goethe, Byron, Hans Christen Andersen, Sitting Bull, Mark Twain, John Keats, Gogol, and more. It was a mainstay of my Rome tours with the British School at Rome, and to meet friends.
Half of the Tiber survey team in Rome for planning the next phase.
Thanks!
Can I ask if this takes into account eustatic and isostatic sealevel change?
Serop Simonian of the alleged Dib-Simonian trafficking network is on the lam after French authorities released him amid a sprawling investigation of his role in trafficking looted Egyptian antiquities to institutions including the Met and Louvre Abu Dhabi.
www.theartnewspaper.com/2025/03/27/s...
Thanks Andrew!
In Rome for the Underwater Archaeological Missions in the Mediterranean conference in the beautiful Instituto Centrale del Restauro. Many brilliant colleagues presenting on missions that span the Mediterranean- and all in memory of our colleague Sebastiano Tusa.
The OSCE Heritage Crime Task Force ran another training workshop in Poland this week. Investigators from around Eastern Europe gathered to learn investigative techniques and forensic evidence collection for heritage crimes. Another impactful workshop for the OSCE.
Thrilled to announce that myself and colleagues have created Heritage Crime Investigations Inc to provide bespoke training workshops and forensic kits for heritage managers, police, and military. We’ve hit the ground running with consultancies for a number of institutions. heritagecrime.com
Brilliant! It’s a good gig.
Roads less travelled: we are visiting the remote atolls of the Seychelles - Saint-Francois, Assumption, and Astove. Accessing these locations with PONANT is a special opportunity as they are home to endangered species and fascinating archaeology. #ponant #explorersclub
Another OSCE Heritage Crime Task Force training workshop is in the books: this time tackling underwater heritage crime. Big thanks to our hosts in Portugal, good to see the task force and Portuguese archaeologists again!
As we approach the Winter Solstice, here's what Stonehenge looked like in the 16th century.
BL Add MS 28330; Lucas De Heere, Corte Beschryvinghe van Engheland, Schotland, ende Irland; 1573 CE-1575 CE; England (London); f.36r
Thanks Nigel!
A full week of Birthdays ahead at Past Preservers, starting off with our expert, Underwater Archaeologist, Dr @petercampbell.bsky.social!
Happy Birthday Peter!
That’s very sad news
I love a bad archaeology movie! I just rewatched Timeline (2003). This is going on the list.
TOI on Sotheby's "10 Commandments" sale: "the story the sellers (or forgers) tell is almost always a tall tale, which has been spun so as to convince the buyer that some inscription is ancient and that it was pulled from the soil of some archaeological site."
blogs.timesofisrael.com/sothebys-sam...
I don't know about archaeology, but in paleontology, it's not uncommon for peasant farmers to forge significant fossils (typically by carving new features into a fossil, or sticking two fossils together) for financial incentive.
Here's me doing my favorite thing last week: talking about the looting (and return!) of the Bubon bronzes, a story I have been researching, writing, and speaking about since 2012. www.npr.org/2024/12/08/n... 1/5
Approximately 1500 years old. Agreed- I’m concerned by the drill marks and weathering, but without closer inspection it is just speculation that it could be a modern metal drill bit.
Yes this case is a great parallel! And I also had a reaction to the term “peasant” - as an archaeologist whose practice is all based around fishers and farmers, I’ve seen first hand their brilliant knowledge of landscape and history.