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Life history of the Yangzi Estuary II shipwreck: environmental DNA from sediment in a 150-year-old amphora

  • Xiaolin Ma
  • , Zhihang Ma
  • , Panxin Du
  • , Haixia Wen
  • , Nan Hu
  • , Yiran Xu
  • , Edward Allen
  • , Luo Zhao
  • , Yan Ge
  • , Xin Wei
  • , Zhanghua Wang*
  • , Yang Zhai*
  • , Shaoqing Wen*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Shipwrecks provide invaluable insights into human society and trade. Their unique preservation conditions also mean that they can serve as exceptional biobanks, recording traces of organisms carried aboard or arriving post wreck. Yet only limited research has explored the genetic potential of onboard sediments. Here, the authors present environmental and metagenomic analyses of sediments contained in a large amphora from the 150-year-old Yangzi Estuary II shipwreck. Weaving the results with historic texts, they reconstruct part of the history of the wrecked vessel, elucidating cargo-packing techniques, its likely season and port of sailing, and its ultimate submersion within the estuarine environment.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)164-181
Number of pages18
JournalAntiquity
Volume100
Issue number409
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2026

Keywords

  • ancient environmental DNA
  • China
  • metagenome
  • nineteenth century AD
  • sediment
  • shipwreck
  • underwater archaeology

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