On the ground floor, a section is dedicated to the artefacts found
underwater, including materials that were part of the cargo of vessels, stone anchors, strains of lead, lamps,
amphoras, and inscriptions ranging from the culture of the Phoenicians to that of the Romans. The Phoenician section displays two large
anthropomorphic sarcophagi of the 5th century BC from the necropolis of Pizzo Cannita (near modern
Misilmeri). There are also sculptures of gods and Phoenician votive
stelae from
Mozia and
Lilybaeum. A reconstruction of the east pediment of the archaeological site of
Selinunte is exhibited, displaying the
Gorgon of Temple C, several metopes with mythological reliefs (Temples C and E), and sculptures of the
archaic and
classical period. In 1823, two British architects,
Samuel Angell and William Harris, ventured to excavate at Selinunte in the course of their tour of Sicily, and came upon many fragments of sculptured metopes from the Archaic temple now known as "Temple C". Although local officials tried to stop them, they continued their work and attempted to export their finds to England, destined for the
British Museum. Now in the shadow of the activities of
Lord Elgin, Angell and Harris's shipments were diverted to Palermo, where they remain to this day in the Archaeological Museum. Artifacts from
Himera are on display, as well as objects and sculptures from
Solunto,
Megara Hyblaea,
Tindari,
Kamarina, and
Agrigento. Among the most important works of art are the great Ram bronze of the third century BC from Syracuse, a Roman copy of a sculpture by
Lysippus depicting
Heracles catching the
Ceryneian Hind and a Roman copy of a marble statue by
Praxiteles depicting a
satyr. The Roman period is documented by a collection of sculptures and mosaics found in villas from Piazza Vittoria in Palermo, where the center of the Roman city was previously located. Even prehistoric cultures present in the caves around the territory of Palermo are exhibited in the museum. ==Collections==