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French high-tech mission reveals secrets of 16th-century shipwreck

cudhfrance@gmail.com by cudhfrance@gmail.com
April 28, 2026
in France
0
French high-tech mission reveals secrets of 16th-century shipwreck


A remotely operated submarine has begun uncovering the secrets of a 16th-century shipwreck lying 2.5 kilometres beneath the Mediterranean off southern France, where researchers are delicately recovering brightly coloured ceramic treasures from the deepest wreck ever found in French territorial waters.

Issued on: 28/04/2026 – 16:31




3 min Reading time

At a secret location off Ramatuelle on France’s southern coast, the Camarat 4 sank around 500 years ago and was discovered by chance in 2025 during a French military seabed survey.

Now, Operation Calliope 26.1 is carrying out the first stage of a joint research mission on the wreck, led by Cephismer, the French Navy’s deep-sea intervention unit, and DRASSM, the Culture Ministry’s underwater archaeology department.

Its exact coordinates are being kept secret because of the sensitivity of the objects found on the seabed.

Wreck discovered of French steamship that sank in Atlantic in 1856

Deep descent

Launched this year, the project aims to further investigate the wreck and its cargo using a remotely operated underwater vehicle capable of descending to 4,000 metres.

Tethered by cable to a tugboat platform, the robot is equipped with several cameras and articulated arms. Two containers onboard allow teams to control the machine and monitor its live feed.

After two hours of sailing from the Var coast, the high-seas tug Jason reaches the site, where the machine is lowered into the water.

After an hour-long descent, it reaches the wreck site.

The ROV C 4000, a remotely operated underwater vehicle used for deep-sea exploration, is brought aboard the Jason during an archaeological mission to investigate the Camarat 4 shipwreck off Ramatuelle in southern France on 7 April 2026.
The ROV C 4000, a remotely operated underwater vehicle used for deep-sea exploration, is brought aboard the Jason during an archaeological mission to investigate the Camarat 4 shipwreck off Ramatuelle in southern France on 7 April 2026. AFP – THIBAUD MORITZ

“It’s extremely precise work to avoid damaging the site, to avoid stirring up the sediment,” Sébastien, head of the Calliope 26.1 mission, said. “This delicate work is also of major importance for training our sailors.”

On control screens, researchers watch the wreck emerge – the ship’s structure, a cannon and hundreds of pitchers and plates decorated with floral motifs, crosses and blue, orange and green fish.

Drone discovers 16th-century shipwreck at record depth in French waters

Merchant clues

The onboard camera captures eight images per second for three hours, producing nearly 68,000 photos to build a 3D model of the wreck.

“The visibility is excellent,” said Franca Cibecchini, a maritime archaeologist at DRASSM.

“You can’t really tell how deep it is. Thanks to this quality, we can say that it’s likely a merchant ship carrying Ligurian faience [from northwestern Italy], so perhaps from the port of Genoa or Savona.”

Researchers say the site may offer rare evidence about 16th-century trade because its depth means it was likely untouched after it sank.

“What’s also important is that this is a site where there could have been no attempt at looting after the shipwreck,” said Marine Sadania, the researcher leading operations.

“For the 16th century, we have texts that aren’t very detailed about merchant ships, so this is a valuable source of information on maritime history and transport networks.”

Several pitchers and plates were recovered during the expedition for study on land.

Marine Sadania, the researcher leading operations on the Camarat 4 mission, examines a ceramic jug recovered from the wreck at the DRASSM laboratory in Marseille on 16 April 2026.
Marine Sadania, the researcher leading operations on the Camarat 4 mission, examines a ceramic jug recovered from the wreck at the DRASSM laboratory in Marseille on 16 April 2026. AFP – THIBAUD MORITZ

Fragile recovery

At the DRASSM laboratory in Marseille, Sadania carefully examined one of the ceramic pieces underwater.

“This is one of the deepest objects ever recovered from a shipwreck in France,” Sadania said. “For us, it’s an opportunity to test protocols for extracting these artifacts while preserving their integrity.”

Around a third of ceramics recovered from deep-water excavations later break, for reasons scientists still cannot explain.

A temporary exhibition at the Toulon Maritime Museum in November will present the mission’s first findings, while the wreck itself will remain on the seabed under Unesco conservation guidelines.

(with AFP)

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