The Antikythera Mechanism on display

9news.com

(NEWSER) – A shipwreck that yielded a 2,000-year-old “computer” known as the Antikythera Mechanism is being freshly explored using another remarkable piece of technology.
A new, spacesuit-like “Exosuit” is being worn by deep-sea-diving archaeologists searching a shipwreck off the coast of a Greek island over the next month. The $1.5 million suit “expands our capabilities” and will let workers “grasp, pluck, clench, and dig” around the 400-foot deep wreck for hours, an archeaologist involved with the Antikythera expedition tells AFP.

The main fragment of the Antikythera machine
A fragment of the Antikythera machine

Revealing X-ray of the device

The suit is like a “wearable submarine,” a diving specialist on the mission told New Scientist earlier this year. “The pressure inside is no different from being in a submarine or in fresh air. We can go straight to the bottom, spend five hours there and come straight back to the surface with no decompression.”

Replica of how the outside of the case would likely have appeared

So what are they hoping to find? The Antikythera Mechanism was discovered by sponge divers in 1900, and 82 fragments of it have thus far been found amidst the wreck of the Roman ship that foundered near the remote island around 60BC,News.com.au reports.

But the curator of London’s Science Museum believes one fragment doesn’t fit — indicating there could be a second mechanism. There could also be additional parts of the mechanism already discovered, researchers believe.

“There are dozens of items left, this was a ship bearing immense riches from Asia Minor,” another archaeologist on the expedition says.

The divers will also search for evidence of a second shipwreck believed to sit a few hundred feet away.