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"Concordia" Not the First Sunk by Treacherous Reef

Costa Concordia captain Francesco Schettino wasn't the only seaman who drove his ship into the rocks off the Tuscan island of Giglio, ripping a huge gash in the hull that sent the 114,500-ton vessel tumbling onto its side.

Before him, other ship commanders had a close encounter with the cursed reefs that jut out off the island's coast.

In fact, more than a dozen ancient ships rest in Giglio's treacherous waters.

One of them, a third-century Roman cargo vessel, lies about 1,000 feet south of the Concordia's bow at a depth of 130 feet.

Loaded with fish sauce-filled jars, the late Roman imperial ship was on the same route followed by Schettino on Jan. 13, when it struck the infamous stretch of rock known as Le Scole....

Read entire article at Discovery News