Lost Northwest Passage ship found by Canadian searchers, 170 years on

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Lost Northwest Passage ship found by Canadian searchers, 170 years on


Finding one of two British vessels could solve a mystery - and bolster Canada's claim to route

PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 10 September, 2014, 10:57pm
UPDATED : Thursday, 11 September, 2014, 3:23am

Associated Press in Toronto

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The Franklin expedition ship on the seabed. Photo: Reuters

One of two British explorer ships that vanished in the Arctic nearly 170 years ago during a search for the fabled Northwest Passage has been found, Canada's prime minister announced in a discovery that could unlock one of history's biggest mysteries and swell Canadian pride.

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Last seen in the 1840s while under the command of Rear Admiral Sir John Franklin, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror have long been among the most sought-after prizes in marine archaeology and the subject of songs, poems and novels.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper's office said the well-preserved wreck of one of the ships was found on Sunday with the help of a remotely operated underwater vehicle. It was 11 metres below the surface near King William Island, about 1,900km northwest of Toronto.

Harper said that it was unclear which ship it was, but that sonar images yielded enough information to confirm it was one of Franklin's.

"This is truly a historic moment for Canada," said Harper. "This has been a great Canadian story and mystery and the subject of scientists, historians, writers and singers, so I think we really have an important day in mapping the history of our country."

Harper said the discovery would shed light on what happened to Franklin's crew.

Franklin and 128 officers and men disappeared after setting out in 1845 for the Northwest Passage, the long-sought shortcut to Asia that supposedly ran from the Atlantic to the Pacific by way of the harsh, ice-choked Arctic.

Historians believe the ships were lost in 1848 after they became locked in the ice and the crews abandoned them in a hopeless bid to reach safety. Inuit lore tells of "white men who were starving" as late as the winter of 1850 on Royal Geographical Society Island.

Dozens of searches by the British and Americans in the 1800s failed to locate the wrecks, and some of those expeditions ended in tragedy, too. But they opened up parts of the Canadian Arctic to discovery and ultimately spied a Northwest Passage, though it proved inhospitable to shipping because of ice and treacherous weather.

Tantalising traces of the ships have been found over the years, including the bodies of three crewmen discovered in the 1980s.

Canada announced in 2008 that it would look for the ships, and Harper's government has poured millions into the venture, with the prime minister himself taking part in the search.

His government made the project a priority as it looked to assert Canada's sovereignty over the Northwest Passage, where melting Arctic ice has unlocked the very shipping route Franklin was after. Canada says it owns the passage. The US and others say it is international territory.

Ryan Harris, an underwater archaeologist helping to lead the Parks Canada search, said a sonar image showed some deck structures, including the main mast, which was sheared off by the ice when the vessel sank. He said the contents of the ship were most likely in the same good condition.

The next step is to send divers to explore the ships and seek out any artefacts, as well as human remains. The exact location was not disclosed for fear of looters.


 
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