(DCS系统)和(机器人系统)及(大型伺服控制系统)备件大卖!叫卖!特卖!卖卖卖!
Divers scavenging in shipwrecks slumbering at the bottom of the North Sea since World War II were disappointed not to find dazzling troves of gold and jewels.
As consolation, not only did they turn up decades-old wine, but the wine came with a bonus: It was better than equivalent vintages selling for top dollar in luxury caves.
Among the latest to test the benefits of a deep soak are Bandol winemakers in southern France who teamed up with a dive school for a year-long experiment.
Choosing a tranquil section of a marine park off the Riviera, they submerged 120 bottles of Bandol wine to a depth of 40 meters, leaving them there for a year.
Another 120 bottles were kept in a cellar for comparison purposes.
"It's important not just to live long but to live well," said Guillaume Tari, head of the regional wine association, Vins de Bandol.
Submersion in deep waters "preserves the acidity because there's not much light, there's absolutely no air, it's relatively cool and the temperature is constant," Tari said.
The underwater conditions - total darkness and ?constant ?temperature - are thought to ?initially accelerate the ageing process, adding complexity to the wine.
Over longer periods, the aging process slows or stops altogether, making underwater storage excellent for conservation and explaining why shipwreck wine emerges so well.
Master sommelier Gisele Marguin took part in a blind tasting, comparing the underwater Bandols with the same wines stored in a traditional cave.
The underwater Bandol had "a nice texture in the mouth, a good structure and notes of very ripe dark fruit ... even chocolatey," she said.
However its "secondary aromas are not sufficiently present" - suggesting that the wine would benefit from more time with Davy Jones.
"It's a wine of the future," she said.
"I think that this only can be done with great vintages. It wouldn't be much use to submerge wines with a less promising future."