IJNA contents 33.2
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International Journal of Nautical Archaeology
From issue 34.1: The Navarino naval battle site, Greece...,
by George Papatheodorou, Maria Geraga and George Ferentinos:
A remote sensing survey of Navarino Bay has identified many of the
Turkish-Egyptian ships lost in the battle of 1827. Their remains are being
damaged by heavy modern anchors, which plough deep furrows through the
sediment as they are dragged free.
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Articles
Seal on land, elk at sea: Notes on and applications of the ritual
landscape at the seabord
C. Westerdahl
'Ruling theories linger': Questioning the identity of the Beaufort
inlet shipwreck
B.A. Rodgers, N, Richards and W.R. Lusardi
The bronze age Ferriby boats: Seagoing ships or estuary ferry boats?
J. Coates
Seascapes and landscapes - the siting of the Ferriby boat finds in the
context of prehistoric pilotage
H.P. Chapman and P.R. Chapman
Arcade river archaeological complex: Dredges and archaeology
F. Castro
Rose de Freycinet and the French exploration corvette L'Uranie (1820): A
highlight of the 'French connection' with the 'Great Southland'
M. McCarthy
The rigging and the 'hydraulic system' of the Roman wreck at Grado, Gorizia, Italy
C. Beltrame and D. Gaddi
Dowels as a means of edge-to-edge joinery in the 9th-century AD vessel from Bozburun, Turkey
M.B. Harpster
The Navarino naval battle site, Greece - an integrated remote-sensing
survey and a rational management approach
G. Papatheodorou, M. Geraga and G. Ferentinos
Rigging the pepper wreck. Part 1 - masts and yards
F. Castro
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