by Dr. Shelley Wachsmann
Meadows Professor of Biblical Archaeology
New edition, now in paperback from Texas A&M University Press
On a cold, cloudy day in early February 1985, Shelley Wachsmann, then resident nautical archaeologist for the Israel Department of Antiquities and Museums, drove to Kibbutz Ginosar, an agricultural settlement near the shores of the Sea of Galilee. Two brothers, avid amateur archaeologists, had found a boat buried in the lake, its outlines revealed by receding lake waters. The boat was "possibly ancient," according to the handwritten note placed on Wachsmann's desk a day or two before.
So begins the fascinating story of The Sea of Galilee Boat, as Wachsmann narrates the intriguing discovery and painstaking excavation of the very first biblical-era boat ever found in the Sea of Galilee.
Shelley Wachsmann, a distinguished nautical archaeologist, is an expert on seacraft of the Ancient Near East. Wachsmann is the Meadows Professor Biblical Archaeology in the nautical archaeology program at Texas A&M University.
"The Sea of Galilee Boat takes readers with the author through each stage of his investagation and communicates the excitement felt as excavation and research progress... Wachsmann's pleasure in his work is evident and well conveyed by his personal reflections." - American Journal of Archaeology
The Sea of Galilee Boat
978-1-60344-113-1 Paper $23.00 (INA Members Price: $16.10)
5 1/2 X 8 1/2. pp. 92 b&w photos. 32 line drawings. 2 maps. Bib. Index. Archaeology. Nautical Archaeology. Israel. Biblical Studies
May, 2009.