The IJsselkogge shipwreck was discovered in 2009 in the river IJssel in the city of Kampen (Netherlands) along with two smaller vessels. It dates to the early 15th Century and is one of the best preserved examples of a Medieval Cog, a type of transport ship which was extensively used by merchants of the Hanseatic League.
The wreck, which measures 20x8m, was excavated and lifted from the riverbed in the winter of 2015-2016 by a team of over 20 archaeologists, professional divers and engineers. The important find is now being conserved in a climate controlled hangar in Lelystad, where this photogrammetry scan was made.
Project led by Wouter Waldus from ADC Archeoprojecten, dive operations by Baars-CIPRO, logistics and lifting by HEBO Maritiemservice, 3D scans by Ubi3D.
People models by Loïc Norgeot.
9 comments
Congrats on the staff pick: that's a very nice piece of history, nicely scanned and with a nice presentation !
I love how the two children are staring at the ship, they seem to be very interested in this specific wall ;)
(and thanks for the credit!)
wow
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@tradboats - thanks Pat, that means a lot to me coming from you :) ! @maritimearchaeologytrust @miguelbandera - cheers! @alban - ooh cool, thank you Alban!
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wow! awesome! thanks for sharing
Great work, staff pick.
Most impressive, also the presentation is great, congratulations
Lovely work, Well Done