12th century Crusader sword discovered "by chance" by student off coast of Israel, university says
CBSN
A centuries-old sword from the time of the Crusades was discovered by a student swimming off the coast of Haifa, Israel, the University of Haifa revealed on Monday. In:
A centuries-old sword from the time of the Crusades was discovered by a student swimming off the coast of Haifa, Israel, the University of Haifa revealed on Monday.
Shlomi Katsin, a student in the university's Department of Maritime Civilizations, was swimming off Dor Beach when he saw a group of divers with metal detectors, the school said. Katsin feared the divers were antiquities thieves and was able to chase them out of the area. Then, he saw the sword protruding from the seafloor, the university said. The discovery was entirely "by chance," according to the news release.
Katsin reached out to Department of Maritime Civilizations professor Debi Tsveikal to report the find. Tsveikal contacted the Israel Antiquities Authority. The university said the authority "granted special permission to remove the sword from the water in order to preserve it and prevent damage."
The three-foot-long blade was recovered and brought to a conservation laboratory at the university's Leon Recanati Institute of Maritime Studies. Then it was taken to Medica Elisha Hospital in Haifa, where a CT scan allowed researchers to learn more details about the blade without damaging it. Photos show the sword covered in seashells and other marine sediment.
The scan showed that the sword was made to be held in one hand and likely belonged to a Crusader warrior from Europe. There was a fracture in the sword blade, and most of the iron that the weapon had originally been made from had been eaten away by "the ravages of time and the sea," the university said.

Gold Coast, Australia — The Iranian women's soccer team left Australia minus seven of its members who were granted asylum, after tearful protests of their departure at Sydney Airport and frantic final efforts inside the terminal by Australian officials who sought to ensure the women understood they were being offered asylum. In:

The White House is aware that Gulf countries have said they're running short on missile interceptors, and that they've said they're having to choose which objects to blow up — and which not to — multiple sources told CBS News. The White House has discussed the matter, the sources said. Margaret Brennan contributed to this report. In:











