In the 1960s, Susan Womer Katzev, a marine illustrator, and her husband, the archaeologist Michael L. Katzev, spent two summers diving with a team beneath the lapping waves of the Mediterranean off Cyprus.
Their quarry was an ancient shipwreck on the sandy ocean floor discovered just years earlier by a man foraging for sponge.
After more than 2,000 years underwater, much of its hull and cargo — old plates, coins, amphoras that once held wine and others that still held almonds — were remarkably intact.
Mrs. Katzev’s drawings and photographs helped document a discovery that revealed not only ancient trading behaviors but also a wealth of information about how the Greeks built ships.
For decades, her and her husband’s efforts have been heralded for their central role in establishing nautical archaeology as a field.
Persons:
Susan Womer Katzev, Michael L, Katzev, Katzev’s
Organizations:
Archaeological Institute of America
Locations:
Cyprus, Kyrenia, Rhodes