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Echoes from the Deep: Inventorising shipwrecks at the national scale by the application of marine geophysics and the historical tekst

English

By (author): Innes McCartney

In a process analogous with the impact of aerial photography on landscape archaeology, marine geophysics is locating the remains of thousands of shipwrecks across the seabed of the globe. This research project set out to establish whether all of the shipwrecks in a given geographic region could be identified by name through the mutual study of the 3D models of the shipwrecks, alongside the historic text of shipping losses in the same area.All of the 273 shipwrecks in a 7,500sqm study area in the Irish Sea were surveyed using multibeam echosounder. The methodologies subsequently developed to identify the wrecks enabled names to be given to 80% of the unknown ships, verified by their dimensions, their geographic position, and archival descriptions of the sinking of each ship. In all 87% of the ships in the study are now identified.In historic terms, the newly identified wrecks included myriad vessels from trawlers, cargo vessels, submarines, through to the largest ocean liners and tankers. They include rare ship designs, losses of national importance, and naval graves. Several of the wrecks uncovered have potential environmental concerns. The accurate dating of so many wrecks in one area has a major impact on the study of seabed dynamics and site formation processes, creating better models for the placement of windfarms and tidal generators.This research is important because the seabed of the world is being increasingly mapped in detail, and shipwrecks are being located in large numbers. This research developed a low-cost means of inventorising shipwreck datasets across entire national zones without costly physical interaction with each wreck site. It should be of key interest to marine scientists, environmental agencies, hydrographers, heritage managers, maritime archaeologists, and historians around the world. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 178 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Sep 2022
  • Publisher: Sidestone Press
  • Publication City/Country: Netherlands
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9789464261172

About Innes McCartney

Innes McCartney is a nautical archaeologist specialising in the interaction of shipwreck archaeology with the historical record. In 1999 he discovered the 12-inch-gunned submarine HMS M1 off Start Point in the English Channel. In 2001 he discovered the wreck of HMS Indefatigable sunk at the Battle of Jutland. In the same year he led expeditions to identify some of the U-boats sunk during Operation Deadlight. Fourteen U-boats were surveyed and several new sites discovered. In 2003 he identified the mystery World War I U-boat off Trevose Head Cornwall as UB-65 by scraping the propellers to reveal the shipyard stamp. This proved that even at 60 metres depth war graves of this type can be identified by divers without the need to scavenge parts from them. This featured in the Channel 4 series Wreck Detectives. In 2006 he featured in the documentary U-boat Death-Trap which followed his search for the identity of three mystery U-boats off the north coast of Cornwall. In the same year he discovered the German auxiliary raider HSK Komet in the English Channel. At the time it was the only known example of this type of warship anywhere in the world. In 2008 he found the White Star Line transport SS Armenian off the Scilly Isles. In 2012 McCartney worked alongside wreck hunter David Mearns on an archaeological investigation of the wreck of HMS Hood sunk in 1941. This project was supported by philanthropist Paul Allen aboard his yacht Octopus. The expedition findings were featured in the Channel Four documentary How the Bismarck sank HMS Hood. 2014 saw publication of The Maritime Archaeology of a Modern Conflict: Comparing the archaeology of German submarine wrecks to the historical text. It shows the extent to which historical sources relating U-boat losses in UK waters in both world wars differ from the actual distribution of the known and identified wrecks. Over 40% of those investigated had no historical precedent. The accuracy of the historic text fell as low as 36% during 1945. In 2015 and 2016 McCartney worked as archaeological advisor to the Sea War Museum Jutland on detailed archaeological shipwreck surveys to locate all of the heretofore undiscovered wrecks of the Battle of Jutland. This was published in Jutland 1916: The Archaeology of a Naval Battlefield for which he was awarded the 2016 Anderson Medal by the Society for Nautical Research. The British submarine HMS Tarpon was also located during the North Sea surveys in 2016. In 2016 he helped Scottish Power identify a World War I UB-III Class U-boat off the Wigtownshire coast which was found during the seabed survey for an undersea power cable between England and Scotland. McCartney has suggested the wreck is UB-82 or possibly UB-85 which were both sunk after attacks by British patrol boats in April 1918. In 2017 he assisted the Sea War Museum Jutland in a detailed survey of the Scapa Flow naval anchorages. The results were published in May 2019 in SCAPA 1919: The Archaeology of a Scuttled Fleet. In May 2020 it was announced that the wreck of the landing craft LCT 326 had been found off Bardsey Island during surveys by Bangor University in collaboration with McCartney. The wreck is located over 100 nautical miles from its supposed loss position. In September 2021 as part of the same project it was announced that the minesweeper HMS Mercury had been found in the Irish Sea. It sank in 1940 during sweeping operations. Honours The Anderson Medal of the Society for Nautical Research (UK 2016) awarded for McCartney Innes (19 May 2016). Jutland 1916: The Archaeology of a Naval Battlefield. ISBN 9781844864171. D.K. Brown Memorial Lecture of the World Ship Society (UK 2016) Reg Vallintine Achievement Award of the Historical Diving Society (UK 2014) awarded for The Tin Openers Myth and Reality. Selected bibliography McCartney Innes (2020). The Archaeology of Second World War U-boat Losses in the English Channel and its Impact on the Historical Record. Mariners Mirror. 106 (1): 6281. doi:10.1080/00253359.2020.1692578. McCartney Innes (2019). SCAPA 1919: The Archaeology of a Scuttled Fleet. Osprey. ISBN 978-1472828903. McCartney Innes (2019). The Archaeology of First World War U-boat Losses in the English Channel and its Impact on the Historical Record. Mariners Mirror. 105 (2): 183201. doi:10.1080/00253359.2019.1589114. McCartney Innes (2018). Scuttled in the Morning: the discoveries and surveys of HMS Warrior and HMS Sparrowhawk the Battle of Jutlands last missing shipwrecks. The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology. 47 (2): 253266. doi:10.1111/1095-9270.12302. McCartney Innes (2018). Paying the Prize for the German Submarine War: U-boats destroyed and the Admiralty Prize Fund 19191932 (PDF). Mariners Mirror. 104: 4057. doi:10.1080/00253359.2018.1411100. S2CID 165637258. McCartney Innes (2017). The Opening and Closing Sequences of the Battle of Jutland 1916 Re-examined: archaeological investigations of the wrecks of HMS Indefatigable and SMS V4 (PDF). The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology. 46 (2): 317329. doi:10.1111/1095-9270.12236. McCartney Innes (2017). The Battle of Jutlands Heritage under Threat: The extent of commercial salvage on the shipwrecks as observed 2000-2016 (PDF). Mariners Mirror. doi:10.1080/00253359.2017.1304701. S2CID 165003480. McCartney Innes (2016). Jutland 1916: The Archaeology of a Naval Battlefield. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1844864164. McCartney Innes (2015). The Tin Openers Myth and Reality: Intelligence from U-boat Wrecks During WW1. Proceedings of the 24th Annual Conference of the Historical Diving Society. McCartney Innes (2015). The Maritime Archaeology of a Modern Conflict: comparing the archaeology of German submarine wrecks to the historical text. Routledge. doi:10.1111/1095-9270.12219. ISBN 978-1138814356.

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