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March 2001

SCUBA-SE@RAVEN.UTC.EDU

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Subject:
From:
Krazy Kiwi <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
SouthEast US Scuba Diving Travel list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 15 Mar 2001 02:00:00 -0500
Content-Type:
text/plain
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On Thu, 15 Mar Reef Fish <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

>Unfortunately, I had a hard time READING it because it appeared in the
>webpage archives as FOUR humongous lines (without wrap).  What mailer
>did you use to post that article?

Aaaarrrgh .. bloody Microcrap ie Outlook .. me forgot bout that .. sorry
reposting it... and no, I hadnt been sniffing Strike's phyco-plonk  :-))

West Australian Newspaper article by Carmelo Amalfi - titled Lost Ship Hunt.
A team of dives from the West Australian (WA) Maritime Museum and British
armed services joined forces for an expedition to the Falkland Islands. On
the agenda - locating the Uranie wreck and fostering links between WA and
the Falklands through a shared maritime heritage. Discovered 181 years
after the ship sank she has significant links with early exploration off
Western Australia.

The 19th century corvette sailed to Shark Bay in 1818 on a voyage of
scientific discovery. Some geological and biological specimens collected in
Western Australia during de Freycinet's mission were lost when the ship
sank. The shipwreck sailors were rescued after 10 weeks in Uranie Bay.
Their camp appears to have been spread over about 800 metres along the
foreshore and divided into a civilian area and a military section. Another
man-made structure about 1 kilometre away opposite Long Island Farm could
have been the armoury, which Uranie's captain Louis de Freycinets wife,
Rose, said in her diaries was some way from their camp. It also could have
been a stockade for the Port Jackson convicts de Freycinet brought on board
in Sydney in 1819.

Local divers Dave Eynon and Ken Halliday first found indications of the
wreck about 30 years ago but due to being pushed around by storms the
search for the wreck by this team was a little unsuccessful at first as
they had been searching in the wrong area for a few days east of an area
off rocks nicknamed Dog Reef. They changed course and decided to search at
the end of the rocks. 1 1/2 hours later found they discovered timbers,
followed by the keel in 4.5 metres of water. Buried in sand, she lies with
the bow facing the shore 200 metres away. No cannon and anchors were found
so they think she was lightened and looted since sinking in 1820.  Copper
fastenings, keel bolts, fire bricks, iron works & more timber frames also
lie in the kelp-covered seabed of Uranie Bay, about 20 kilometres north-
west of Stanley, the Falklands' capital.

Team leader Dr Mike McCarthy & his team will now begin to search for
English explorer William Dampier's Roebuck on Ascension Island in the South
Atlantic.

Viv

>
>When I first looked at the post, I rhought it odd in the flow of content
>(because I saw only the first 'line' of each LONG paragraph.  For a
>moment, I thought you had one too many of Strike's phyco-plonk.  :-))
>
>-- Bob.

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