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The Malta Airport Foundation supports Heritage Malta’s world’s first deep-water archaeological park
The deep water park lies at 105 metres below sea level..

Emma Galea

The Malta Airport Foundation has announced that it is supporting Heritage Malta’s pioneering work to declare an underwater site and the world’s first deep-water archaeological park.

The site was first discovered in 1993 just off Xlendi Bay in Gozo and lies at 105 metres below sea level. It is composed of an expanse of Punic archaeological material spread across 67,000 m2.

The Underwater Cultural Heritage Unit within Heritage Malta is researching what could have led to the formation of this unique site. It’s doing so by gradually documenting the area and the artefacts found there through innovative methods which have not been used elsewhere.

While deep-water wrecks are not uncommon attractions, the site’s unparalleled value stems from the combination of thousands of ancient artefacts, such as amphorae and urns, dating back around 2,300 years and natural heritage in the form of rocky outcrops formed by extinct coral reefs.

“It is an honour for the Malta Airport Foundation to contribute to such an important undertaking, which will doubtlessly raise the visibility of the Maltese Islands among technical divers and international researchers,” the Malta Airport Foundation Chairman, Josef Formosa Gauci expressed. 

Heritage Malta’s Chief Executive Officer, Noel Zammit, remarked that the exciting initiative of a deep-water archaeological park attests yet again the sound position of the national agency for cultural heritage at the forefront of its sector.

The underwater site is currently being mapped and documented by Heritage Malta’s Underwater Cultural Heritage Unit, with the support of the University of Malta and the Superintendence of Cultural Heritage.

The artefacts found at this site are being preserved under water, in line with the UNESCO Convention on the Protection of Underwater Cultural Heritage to which Malta is a signatory.

While there are no plans to raise these objects from the seabed, the location of the artefacts, their type and condition are being entered in a geodatabase, which will have different levels of access.

The Xlendi deep-water marine park will also be made accessible to the public through 360-degree videos, images and 3D models uploaded on the Underwater Malta website, which is a virtual museum of the islands’ underwater archaeological sites.

Moreover, the Xlendi coastal watch tower, close to which the Xlendi marine park is located, will house a permanent exhibition, which is set to open its doors to the public in 2023.

How exciting!

16th November 2022


Emma Galea
Written by
Emma Galea
Emma is a Gozitan writer who loves all things related to English literature and history. When not busy studying or writing you will either find her immersed in a fictional book or at the cinema trying to watch as my films as she possibly can!

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