Team Leader Raimund Krobe, with Jonathan Cho Fook Lun and Petwr Heyes, carefully cutting one of the ghost concretions under the watchful eyes of staff member May Loo
One of the possible plane blades with a white French faienceware beaker concreted to it, having a section cut
The underside of the possible plane blades with a white French faienceware beaker concreted to it, having a section cut
Close up of the French Faienceware beaker which at this point was still concreted to the ghost concretion
A cross section of the cut showing the void
Topside of another ghost blade being cut
The underside
During the examination some fibrous residue was found in the concretion. This gave the appearance of a type of felt, which might have been used to wrap the item
Clearly orriginaly the shape of the object was bent
From a side profile a series of iron nails can be seen in the concretion
The cross section of the ghost
A cross section of the ghost item which came close to the beaker.
Some of the concretion has been carefully removed from the French faienceware beaker, leaving a "tide mark"
Some concreted nails next to the items, forming large ghosts
Showing the cross sections of the iron object in a diferent cut along the item
The outer shell of the concretion was intact and strong
Further cuts showing the square sides of the original item
Cross section showing two items in the concretion. As further cuts were made the ghost items got closer
In the void there were holes which went through the iron object which were now occupied by concretion
Here a depression can be seen above the void
The depression is now clearly an item of its own at a further cut 4 cm away from the last
One can see right through the ghost along the longitudional axis
The third item waiting to be examined
The underside
The fourth concretion to be examined but not cut, using the other cuts as a basis of the analysis
A diferent angle
Maritime archaeologist Wesley cleaning outtheresidue of the iron from the ghosts