• Shipwreck treasure off Goa coast

    Updated: 2010-05-31 03:57:07
    By Mayabhushan - Panaji Next time you are headed for Goa, it makes sense to pack in your scuba gear along with swimming trunks.With more than three shipwrecks discovered and explored off the State’ coast in the last seven years, marine scientists at the National Institute of Oceanography (NIO) here believe that Goa might be the next big thing as far as underwater shipwreck exploration is concerned. “We have begun explorations since 1988 but regular, organised explorations began in...

  • Keith Jessop: salvage diver

    Updated: 2010-05-30 10:18:00
    From Times Online On May 2, 1942, after three days of attacks by German submarines, destroyers and aircraft in the Barents Sea, the mortally wounded cruiser HMS Edinburgh was given her coup de grâce by a torpedo fired from one of her escorting destroyers, and slid from sight beneath the waves. About 840 of her crew of nearly 900 who had not been killed in the attacks on her had been safely transferred to other British warships of the convoy escort. The sailors...

  • Scientists get look at Queen Anne's artifacts

    Updated: 2010-05-29 05:33:00
    By Josh Humphries - The Daily Reflector Scientists from throughout the world are in Greenville this week to get a first-hand look at efforts to preserve artifacts believed to have been aboard the Queen Anne’ Revenge.About 80 conservators and scientists from 15 countries and 10 U.S. states who preserve wet archaeological artifacts are participating in the Triennial Conference of the International Council of Museums, Conservation Committee, Wet Organic Archaeological Materials Group.The group...

  • Schooner Amistad Returns to Mystic for Repairs after Rigging Failure

    Updated: 2010-05-29 00:17:05
    After suffering what was described as “serious rigging failure” in heavy seas off the Florida coast last week, the schooner Amistad has returned to Mystic, CT for repairs.   She is expected to “be there for some time.”  The Amistad was built at Mystic Seaport between 19989 and 2000.   The Amistad was scheduled to participate in the 2010 Great [...]

  • New Scuba Gear: Canon WP-DC31 Underwater Housing for Canon SD780 - $239.95

    Updated: 2010-05-28 22:46:25
    Shipping Rates Security Privacy Order Status My Account Wish List Cart Call our certified SCUBA instructors 800-34-SCUBA 7 days 8AM 6PM PST Price Protection Full Warranties Scuba Resources Happy Customers Search No Sales Tax 150 Price Protection Full Manufacturer's Warranty Scuba Equipment Packages Personal Gear Packages Diving Systems Camera Packages Snorkeling Packages Wetsuit Packages Product Categories Bags Books Videos and CDs Boots Buoyancy Compensators Cameras Clips and Reels Closeouts Clothing Communication Compressors Computers Dive Skins Dry Boxes Dry Suits Fins Gauges Gift Certificate Gift Items Gloves Hood Hookah Systems Instruction Online Kayaks Kidz Gear Knives Lights Masks Miscellaneous Octos Spare Air Regulators Safety First Aid Scooters Snorkels Spearguns Surfing Swimming

  • New Scuba Gear: Canon WP-DC29 Underwater Housing for Canon SD1200/SD770 - $239.95

    Updated: 2010-05-28 22:45:48
    Shipping Rates Security Privacy Order Status My Account Wish List Cart Call our certified SCUBA instructors 800-34-SCUBA 7 days 8AM 6PM PST Price Protection Full Warranties Scuba Resources Happy Customers Search No Sales Tax 150 Price Protection Full Manufacturer's Warranty Scuba Equipment Packages Personal Gear Packages Diving Systems Camera Packages Snorkeling Packages Wetsuit Packages Product Categories Bags Books Videos and CDs Boots Buoyancy Compensators Cameras Clips and Reels Closeouts Clothing Communication Compressors Computers Dive Skins Dry Boxes Dry Suits Fins Gauges Gift Certificate Gift Items Gloves Hood Hookah Systems Instruction Online Kayaks Kidz Gear Knives Lights Masks Miscellaneous Octos Spare Air Regulators Safety First Aid Scooters Snorkels Spearguns Surfing Swimming

  • Scuba Gear Customer Review: NAUI Deluxe Edition 15 Logbook Replacement Pages - $8.95

    Updated: 2010-05-28 22:13:13
    Rating: A perfect fit!These fit perfectly in my NAUI binder, and I can log twice as many dives/page as with the PADI and other log book pages :)

  • New Scuba Gear: Sealife Spare/Replacement Underwater Housing for DC1200 - $249.95

    Updated: 2010-05-28 20:40:43
    Spare/Replacement Housing for the DC 1200 Camera Non-slip rubber armored housing DEPTH: 200 feet Housing only-camera not included FULL MANUFACTURER’S WARRANTY

  • Shipwreck may conceal 'Maracaibo' treasure

    Updated: 2010-05-28 01:38:00
      From Eitb.com Pedro Terrón, author of Kalitxi: The Lost City made the announcement during a hectic press conference alongside archaeologists and researchers. Pedro Terrón, author of the Kalitxi saga about the shipwreck suffered by the Santo Cristo de Maracaibo boat in 1702, gave a press conference on Thursday in which he confirmed that the remains of a ship discovered in 2004 in the Vigo estuary are, with "99.9%" certainty, those of the Maracaibo wreckage.The announcement...

  • Fleet Week New York – “the Super Bowl of Fleet Weeks”

    Updated: 2010-05-27 19:49:18
    New York’s Fleet Week 2010 is underway.  “This is the Super Bowl of Fleet Weeks,” said Michael Salerno, the Navy’s director of Fleet Week, a reference to the many Fleet Weeks that take part around the country, the first of which originated in San Diego in 1935 and is now in its 23rd iteration in [...]

  • The 1770 wreck of the Industry at Kennebunk Beach

    Updated: 2010-05-27 11:13:00
      From Seacostonline.comThe leonine month of March lived up to its reputation in 1960. Nearly a foot and a half of snow fell on coastal York County on March 4. The following week, gale winds blowing from a southeasterly direction scoured Kennebunk Beach in an unusual way, exposing the remains of a shipwreck that few remembered.Bill Calder and Charles Robinson were the first to see crudely constructed ribs projecting 18 inches out of the sand on March 11, and they called George Stevens, photographer...

  • My secret museum !

    Updated: 2010-05-26 05:56:49
      nbsp;    By Julie Weiss - Boston, Massachusetts To end the day, with excitement, intrigue and beauty, please check out Pascal's real life of underwater treasure discoveries.It is my secret museum, and history book that I sneak in to every night and think for hours upon hours about everything from what was being sewn with all the brass thimbles. Was it, Flags, Clothing, Sails ? ho did the jewel's belong to ? Where they to be worn or being set to be sold ?...

  • Warplane, M.I.A. For 60 Years, Comes Home to WNY

    Updated: 2010-05-25 17:12:07
      By Pete Gallivan - WGRZ.com It was a journey that began christmas morning, 1943 in Wheatfield. A P-39 Airacobra, one of the 30,000 planes produced here in Western New York for the war effort, rolls from the hanger and takes off, headed west. She was one of 10,000 planes, many from here in Western New York, that were sent to Russia. It was also a bit of WNY technology turned the tide against the Nazi's.The P-39 was known as the "flying cannon". She was a force in the air. It was equipped...

  • Rapture of the deep

    Updated: 2010-05-25 17:12:07
      From Beta.Lep.co.uk From searching for mines planted on Allied boats during World War II to spying on Russian warships, Sydney Knowles had a colourful life at sea. JENNY SIMPSON speaks to the Prestonian about his new memoir, A Diver in the Dark.Sydney Knowles braced himself as he plunged into the choppy waters and made his descent into their pitch-black depths.Kitted out with nothing but swimming trunks, lead-weighted plimsolls and primitive breathing equipment, Sydney was carrying out...

  • Diver to talk about 'Thousand Islands Lost Fleet'

    Updated: 2010-05-25 17:12:06
      By Jaegun Lee - Watertown Daily Times More than three dozen wrecked pleasure boats and warships from centuries past lie below the surface of the St. Lawrence River waiting for their stories to be told."There are fascinating artifacts on the bottom of the river and we have tons of underwater photos and archaeological photos of these boats," said Raymond I. "Skip" Couch, a veteran diver and founding member of the Clayton Diving Club.Mr. Couch will present the findings of area divers, who...

  • 2,000-year-old shipwreck creates deep sea mystery

    Updated: 2010-05-25 09:10:28
    By  ossella Lorenzi - Discovery News Although the 2,000-year-old shipwreck under the Gran Sasso mountain in central Italy may be a godsend for nuclear physicists, the “Ship of the Thousand Ingots” has been one big mystery for archaeologists.Was the ship, which carried the largest lead shipment ever found, deliberately sunk on the orders of the captain? Was the vessel knocked over by a wave?In this audio slide show, Donatella Salvi, director of the National Archaeological Museum...

  • Hutchinson Island museum to dedicate SEAL memorial

    Updated: 2010-05-24 06:34:00
      By Joe Crankshaw - TCPalm A larger than life-size, bronze statue depicting a fully equipped Navy SEAL, will become the center of a memorial to fallen Underwater Demolition Team men and Navy SEALs on May 28 at the National UDT-SEAL Museum on North Hutchinson Island.“It will memorialize all who have given their lives in all wars,” said retired Navy Capt. Michael R, Howard, director of the museum. Howard is a retired SEAL. The acronym stands for Sea, Air and Land, where the highly...

  • Zwaanendael Museum to explore shipwreck

    Updated: 2010-05-20 19:34:00
    From The Cape Gazette.com The Roosevelt Inlet Shipwreck and DeBraak, two of the more than 200 shipwrecks that have littered the floors of the Atlantic Ocean and Delaware Bay off Lewes, will be explored in the program Zwaanendael Shipwreck Archaeology which will take place from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Saturday, May 29, at the Zwaanendael Museum, 102 Kings Highway, Lewes. In addition to historical information and a display of artifacts recovered from the two shipwrecks, Zwaanendael Shipwreck Archaeology...

  • Tin pots might prove sunken ship's destination

    Updated: 2010-05-19 18:41:00
      From People's Daily Online A new batch of cultural relics from the ancient ship of Nan'ao No.1 were salvaged and exhibited on May 18, including 2 tin pots, walnuts and other porcelains carrying cultural elements of Han and Buddhism. Therefore, experts concluded that Nan'ao No.1's destination might have been Southeast Asia. Sun Jian, the leader of the archaeology team for Nan'ao No.1, said those color glaze porcelains salvaged yesterday are more delicate than relics from the ancient ship...

  • The race to preserve shipwrecks, artifacts

    Updated: 2010-05-18 20:03:00
      redit: Underwater Heritage Program Directorate/Adhi Perwira By Andrea Booth - The Jakarta Post Lack of finance, technology and trained divers, the attempt to sell sunken artifacts — not to mention looters — appear to be hindering the potential to conserve Indonesia’ abundant underwater heritage, a topic under hot discussion of late. The Underwater Heritage Program Directorate (PBA) under the Culture and Tourism Ministry’ Directorate General of History...

  • Unlicensed salvagers biggest threat to HMS Victory

    Updated: 2010-05-18 18:23:00
      From BBC News Unlicensed salvagers have been identified as the biggest threat to the shipwreck of HMS Victory in a report. More than 1,000 sailors drowned when the British warship, the predecessor to Lord Nelson's Victory, sank in a storm. he report is part of the public consultation into the future management of the 1744 shipwreck in the English Channel. Consultation ends on 30 June. The authors of the report said unauthorised salvage could result in "irreparable damage" to the...

  • Mystery at the bottom of Lake Michigan

    Updated: 2010-05-17 07:43:00
      By Shawn McGrath - H-P.comWas it violent weather ? Mechanical failure ? Or pilot error ?Nearly 60 years after the crash of Northwest Airlines Flight 2501 about 20 miles off South Haven in Lake Michigan, the cause of the then-worst air disaster in U.S. history is still unknown, and the location of the plane's watery grave remains a mystery despite yearly searches for the wreckage.William Kaufmann was 6 years old and living in Seattle when his mother, 43-year-old Dorothy Jean Kaufmann, died...

  • Titanic: The Artefact Exhibition

    Updated: 2010-05-15 07:46:00
      By Ray Edgar - The age.com.au When oceanographer Robert Ballard discovered the Titanic in 1985, 4 km. below the Atlantic surface, the debris of the ship was scattered over 2.5 kilometers of ocean floor. Since then, those remains have been scattered around the world. At any one time there are eight Titanic: The Artefact Exhibitions on display. And, if they are anything like the Melbourne Museum's exhibition, all are excellent at telling the stories of the doomed ship.With 1517 passengers...

  • In the Archives: Ypsi's Submarine Diver

    Updated: 2010-05-15 06:21:00
      By Laura Bien - The Ann Harbor chronicle In the summer of 1852, $36,000 in cash and gold bars lay in a locked safe 165 feet deep on the floor of Lake Erie. Worth $920,000 today, the riches lay within the wreck of the steamship Atlantic. So did more grisly testimony of the shipwreck’ victims, estimated as ranging from 130 to over 250. The deaths represented about a third of the 576 travelers packed onto a steamship meant to accommodate far fewer.The era’ stream of immigrants...

  • UAE diving team to search for sunken wartime submarine

    Updated: 2010-05-15 06:04:00
      By Kevin Scott - Gulf News.com A Dubai-based shipwreck hunter is embarking on a new expedition in search of a sunken Italian wartime submarine.William Leeman, a member of the Desert Sports Diving Club in Al Quoz, and his team of divers will begin their five-day search for the Galvani in international waters off the coast of Iran on May 28.The Galvani was sunk by British sloop HMS Falmouth near the Straits of Hormuz on June 26, 1940. Leeman, who was the first person to find the Nazi submarine...

  • Indonesia Criticized for Murky Rules on Sunken Treasures

    Updated: 2010-05-14 05:47:00
      By Putri Prameshwari - The Jakarta PostGiven the country’ thousands of sprawling islands, key shipping lanes and bounty of shipwrecks, the government should immediately draft legislation on the recovery and management of sunken treasures, stakeholders said. Last week’ lack of bidders at an auction of 10th-century ceramics and jewelry recovered from the depths was clear proof that the government had a long way to go toward managing such items, said speakers at a discussion...

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