Founder of the Hellenic Institute of Marine Archaeology (H.I.M.A.), Nikos N. Tsouchlos was a pioneer of underwater archaeological research in Greece. His passion for nautical archaeological research, his integrity of character and his overall approach to life made him a role model and source of inspiration for all the young scientists who worked alongside him.
At the very end of the 1960s, he became closely associated with the American underwater researcher and scholar of ancient shipbuilding, Peter Throckmorton. This acquaintance played a decisive role in shaping his path.
The two collaborated in 1970 on the first systematic underwater archaeological excavation carried out in Greece, at the Byzantine shipwreck at Pelagonnisi in the Northern Sporades.
In consultation with Peter Throckmorton and the archaeologists Charalambos Kritzas and Georgios Papathanassopoulos, he founded in 1973 the Hellenic Institute of Marine Archaeology, the first scientific body in Greece devoted exclusively to the practice and organization of underwater archaeological research.


