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Archaeologists discover beautiful marble floor in an ancient sunken city

Much of the city lies under the sea.

The floor lies in the underwater city of Baie in Italy (Picture: Edoardo Ruspantini/Archeologico Campi Flegrei)
The floor lies in the underwater city of Baie in Italy (Picture: Edoardo Ruspantini/Archeologico Campi Flegrei)

Underwater archaeologists have found a stunning marble floor among the ruins of a Roman city.

The sunken city of Baie is located under the sea in the Gulf of Naples, Italy, not far from Pompei, and was once a luxury holiday retreat.

Over the years, archaeologists have recovered various relics from the city and their latest impressive find is a multicolored marble floor, reports ILF Science.

The floor, which is being painstakingly recovered and restored, features thousands of slabs in different shapes and colours, put together to create beautiful geometric patterns.

The discovery was shared on Facebook page, the Archaeological Park of the Phlegraean Fields.

According to the post, the mosaic is made of marble as well as shell, mother-of-pearl and glass.

It would once have been the floor of a reception room in a villa owned by a high-status individual during the third century, it explains.

Thousands of marble slabs, hundreds of different shapes, brought together to create a highly articulated geometry We are in the submerged park of Baia and this marble floor was at the center of the latest underwater restoration work: a new, very complicated challenge, due to the extreme fragmentation of the remains and their large extension This is the opus sectile of the reception room of the Villa with prothyrum entrance: over 250 square meters built towards the end of the Roman Empire, shortly before bradyseism brought the remains to the bottom of the sea A very expensive and demanding intervention for the owner of the Villa, who however had to make do with recycled materials, i.e. second-hand marble, to create the chosen module, made up of adjacent squares, each with inscribed circles A very demanding job (and still in progress) also for our collaborators CSR Restauro Beni Culturali and Naumacos Underwater Archeology and Technology whose evolution we will update you in the coming weeks
The floor would once have been in the reception room of a luxurious villa (Picture: Parco Archeologico Campi Flegrei)
A snorkeler swims above the mosaic
A snorkeler swims above the mosaic (Picture: Parco Archeologico Campi Flegrei)

The materials would have been second hand (for example previously used for other walls and floors), while the process of putting it together no doubt challenging and expensive, the post says.

For centuries, Baiae was an affluent and fashionable seaside resort visited by Rome’s elite, including Julius Ceaser, Cicero and Hadrian.

The streets were lined with luxurious villas and people visited initially for the rejuvenating volcanic hot springs, said to have healing properties, and in later years for its hedonistic offerings.

Thousands of marble slabs, hundreds of different shapes, brought together to create a highly articulated geometry We are in the submerged park of Baia and this marble floor was at the center of the latest underwater restoration work: a new, very complicated challenge, due to the extreme fragmentation of the remains and their large extension This is the opus sectile of the reception room of the Villa with prothyrum entrance: over 250 square meters built towards the end of the Roman Empire, shortly before bradyseism brought the remains to the bottom of the sea A very expensive and demanding intervention for the owner of the Villa, who however had to make do with recycled materials, i.e. second-hand marble, to create the chosen module, made up of adjacent squares, each with inscribed circles A very demanding job (and still in progress) also for our collaborators CSR Restauro Beni Culturali and Naumacos Underwater Archeology and Technology whose evolution we will update you in the coming weeks
The illustration on the right shows the detailed geometric pattern in a section of the floor (Picture: Parco Archeologico Campi Flegrei)
Thousands of marble slabs, hundreds of different shapes, brought together to create a highly articulated geometry We are in the submerged park of Baia and this marble floor was at the center of the latest underwater restoration work: a new, very complicated challenge, due to the extreme fragmentation of the remains and their large extension This is the opus sectile of the reception room of the Villa with prothyrum entrance: over 250 square meters built towards the end of the Roman Empire, shortly before bradyseism brought the remains to the bottom of the sea A very expensive and demanding intervention for the owner of the Villa, who however had to make do with recycled materials, i.e. second-hand marble, to create the chosen module, made up of adjacent squares, each with inscribed circles A very demanding job (and still in progress) also for our collaborators CSR Restauro Beni Culturali and Naumacos Underwater Archeology and Technology whose evolution we will update you in the coming weeks
Some of the slabs after being removed from the seabed (Picture: Edoardo Ruspantini/ Archeologico Campi Flegrei)

The latter led to the city picking up its relatively recent nickname, ‘The Las Vegas of Rome’.

The famous Stoic philosopher of Rome, Seneca, wasn’t a fan, saying the ‘place should be avoided’ due to its vice and sin.

The ‘riotous reveling’, with people frequenting the beach in various states of drunkenness, disturbed the peace he was looking for, he said.

Baiae’s demise began with the fall of the Roman Empire, which saw the city attacked by various invaders and later in the eighth century, by Muslim armies.

A dive guide shows tourists a copy of a Baiae statue which has been removed and now sits in a museum
A dive guide shows tourists a copy of a Baiae statue which has been removed and now sits in a museum (AFP via Getty Images)
Ruins of the Baths of Diana, Baiae, Pozzuoli, Italy, from Vestigi delle Antichita di Roma Tivoli Pozzuolo et altri luochi (Vestiges of the Antiquities of Rome, Tivoli, Pozzuolo and other places), 1660, engraving by Marco Sadeler from Vestigi dell'Antichita di Roma, 1575, by Etienne Duperac. (Photo by Icas94 / De Agostini via Getty Images)
A 1660 engraving showing the ‘Ruins of the Baths of Diana, Baiae’, by Marco Sadeler (Picture by Icas94/De Agostini via Getty Images)

Then in the 16th century, volcanic activity within the Phlegraean Fields area, whichBaiae sits on, caused much of the city to drop below sea level (a section still sits above).

Over the years some of the artefacts, including statues, have been looted or removed by archaeologists and displayed, many at the Archaeological Museum of Campi Flegrei.

In 2002, the 177-hectare underwater site was made a Marine Protected Area and although licensed divers can explore the area they must do so with a local guide.

The main concern today is not looters but deterioration of what’s left caused by the sea, its tides, marine life and human activity.

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