Atlantic wrecks & boatfinds
Atlantic mid-sea & West Africa including South Africa
- Dufuna canoe, Nigeria. Logboat excavated on land in 1998 together with the Deutsches
Schiffahrtsmuseum, Bremerhaven. Dated to ca 6500 BC and 8.4 m long.
- Western Ledge wreck. Unidentified Spanish ship from late 16th century,
in the Bermudas. Ref
IJNA 22.2 1993.
- São Bento. Portuguese ship sunk off South Africa in 1554. Found in 1968 and
excavated. Ref British Museum Encyclopaedia of Underwater and Maritime Archaeology
.
- Chagas, Portuguese nau sunk in battle near the
Azores in 1594. The wreck has been searched for by treasure hunters.
- Angra D wreck. Remains
of a very large ship in Angra Bay, Azores. May have been 40 m long and sunk around 1600 AD. Link.
- Mauritius. Dutch
VOC ship built in 1601 or 1602. Loaded with 18,000 zinc ingots, wrecked in 1609 off Gabon, West
Africa. Discovered in 1985, excavated by Michel L'Hour and Luc Long.
Ref British Museum
Encyclopaedia of Underwater and Maritime Archaeology.
- Sea Venture,
English ship carrying colonists heading for America. Caught by a storm
and lodged on a reef off the Bermudas in 1609. Everybody survived but
the ship had to be abandoned. This incident may have inspired
Shakespeare to write The Tempest in 1610. The wreck was discovered in
1958 by Edmund Downing and excavated from 1978 by Allan J. Wingood and
Jonathan Adams. Finds are exhibited at the Bermuda Maritime
Museum. The painting by Jonathan Adams shows Sea Venture with pinnace
in tow. Ref IJNA 14.4 1985.
- San Antonio. Spanish ship sailing from Cartagena, Colombia, with gold, silver and
tobacco. Sunk in 1621 in the Bermudas. Investigated by Mendel L. Peterson. Ref G.F. Bass: A
History of Seafaring.
- Santíssimo Sacramento. Portuguese ship sunk at Port Elizabeth, South Africa in 1647.
Found in 1977 and excavated. Porcelain is exhibited at the Port Elizabeth Museum. Ref B. M.
Encyclopaedia of Underwater and Maritime Archaeology.
- Oosterland. Dutch VOC
ship sunk off Cape Town, South Africa in 1697. Discovered in 1988.
- Slot
ter Hooge, Dutch VOC ship sunk off Madeira in 1724. Only 33 people out of 250 survived
the sinking. In 1974 large quantities of silver were salvaged from the site on 18-22 m depth by
treasure hunter John Stenuit, supported by the National Geographic Society. No archaeological
report was ever published. Ref B. M. Encyclopaedia of Underwater and Maritime Archaeology.
- Grosvenor. English East Indiaman going from Ceylon. In 1782
she sank off the Pondoland coast, Cape province, South Africa. The
lost gold and jewellery was valued at more than 2 million pounds in
money of the time. Ref Kenneth Hudson:
The Book of Shipwrecks (Macmillan
1979).
- HMS Pallas.
English 36-gun frigate sunk off the Azores in 1783. Discovered in 1998 and investigated by
Centro Nacional de Arqueologia Subaquática nos Açores. Link.
- Brederode.
Dutch VOC ship sunk off South Africa in 1785. Apparently located in
1998 or 1999. Cargo from the apparently intact wreck is to be salvaged
by the Aqua Exploration company.

- La Méduse. French frigate
heading for Senegal in 1816. Grounded off Senegal in. During the
following days most of the survivors died in horror, suffering from
sun, thirst, and cannibalism on the raft. This resulted in a famous
painting at the Louvre.
The wreck was located with magnetometer in 1980 and investigated.
- SS Central America.
Side
wheel steamship, sunk in 1857 in the deep waters off the
"Graveyard of the Atlantic" off the South
Carolina coast, loaded with 21 tons of gold from California. The wreck was located
by Tommy Thompson in 1988 on 2400 m depth. Much of the gold was salvaged by Tommy
Thompson using an ROV. Also, some books and newspapers were found intact in the wreck.
Described in America's Lost Treasure by Tommy Thompson.
- Vega. Wooden-hulled bark ship with a 60 hp steam engine. Built in
1872–73 as a polar research ship for Swedish explorer A.E. Nordenskiöld. Successfully passed
through the Northeast Passage north of Siberia, from Norway to Japan, in 1878–79. The ship
sank in c 400 m depth off the west coast of Greenland in 1903. There are plans to locate and
raise the ship
.
- Titanic. 269 m long, 46,000-ton passenger ship, sister ship to Britannic
and Olympic. Built in 1909-1911 by Harland and Wolff in
Belfast. Struck an iceberg during its maiden voyage in 1912, and sank
in 2½ hours, in the North
Atlantic. 1517 people died because of insufficient lifeboats. By coincidence the accident was very similar to that
outlined in Morgan
Robertson's 1898 novel Futility. Found in 1985 on 3750 m depth by Dr Robert Ballard and the French Infremer institute.
The Ballard team did video and photo documentation. From 1987 another
workgroup, Titanic Ventures, later renamed, RMS Titanic Inc,
has salvaged hundreds of
artefacts, which have been displayed in exhibitions. This company has
claimed the wreck and by court appointed
"salvor-in-possession".
- Egypt,
P&O liner. In 1922 she collided with the freighter Seine, and sank
in 120 m depth off the French coast. On board was £ 1,000,000 worth
of gold. Finally most of the gold was salvaged in 1933-35. Salvaging
objects from this depth was a sensation.
- HMS Hood. British battle cruiser sunk
by Bismarck
in the North Atlantic in 1941. Link.
- Bismarck. German 247 m long
50,000-ton battleship with eight 38 cm guns, built in 1939. Sank HMS Hood in 1941 in the North Atlantic. Shortly
after that, Bismarck was sunk in the Atlantic off the French coast. Discovered by Dr Robert
Ballard on 4700 m depth. The hull was surprisingly intact, so maybe
the ship was sunk by its own crew rather than surrender it. Described in National Geographic, Nov 1989. photo
- HMS Ark Royal. British aircraft carrier sunk by German sub
U-81 off
Gibraltar in 1941.
- I 52.
This giant Japanese submarine was 107 m long and loaded
with 2 tons of gold for Germany. The coded messages about the
transport were decoded by the Allies and the sub was sunk in 1944 by a
US air attack. Located by Paul Tidwell in 1995 in the Atlantic on 5000 m depth.
There are plans to raise the sub and recover the gold. Ref National
Geographic, Oct '99. Link.
- USS Scorpion. US nuclear sub built in 1959. Lost with 99 men
in the Mid-Atlantic in 1968 and the reason remains a mystery. Resting
on 3600 m depth, no archaeological significance.
Further reading
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