#marine-archaeology

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fromMail Online
1 week ago

Archaeologists fight tides to save the Swash Channel Wreck in Dorset

Archaeologists have fought the tides to save a 17th-century shipwreck from a popular nudist beach in Dorset. The remains are believed to be part of the Swash Channel Wreck, a Dutch merchant ship called The Fame of Hoorn that ran aground while approaching Poole Harbour in 1631. The wreck was found on Dorset's Studland Beach at the end of January when Storm Chandra washed away the sand that had kept it hidden for almost 400 years.
History
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 months ago

A diving prince, sunken treasure and snared by the Titanic: Joe MacInnis on his rip-roaring' life as an ocean adventurer

It could also be the time he led an expedition in the Canadian high Arctic, battling unforgiving ice to locate a lost British vessel crushed by those same elements. Or, when diving in waters off the Florida Keys humming with history, he passed a pod of lobsters clustered in a reef that was composed entirely of 16th-century silver bars from a Spanish galleon.
Science
Roam Research
fromMail Online
9 months ago

Underwater yellow-brick road leads divers to astonishing discovery

Marine archaeologists discovered two long-lost Danish slave ships using yellow bricks found at the ocean floor, confirming their historical existence.
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