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 Search for The Mermaid begins
Andy in West Oz
Posted: Jan 5 2009, 01:28 AM


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QUOTE
A scientific expedition from the Australian Maritime Museum (AMM) will leave Cairns tomorrow attempting to solve one of Queensland's greatest maritime mysteries.

In 1829, a ship called 'The Mermaid' sank after striking an uncharted reef while carrying supplies from Sydney to the Northern Territory.

The wreck is historically significant as the ship was used by maritime explorer Phillip Parker King to map Australia's coast.

Project leader Kieran Hosty believes the treacherous reef that claimed the ship is located off the far north coast.

"We believe that reef lies off the Frankland Islands, south of Cairns," he said.

Over the next two weeks, 28 scientists will survey the area with underwater metal detectors.

"They're highly sensitive, they can find small amounts of iron," Mr Hosty said.

Mr Hosty believes the wreck will be found within two weeks.

"We'll pass that information on to the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority and the Museum of Tropical Queensland," he said.

"They're the two government agencies that look after historic shipwrecks on the Great Barrier Reef.

"They'll be developing management plans and so on to actually manage the wreck if there is significant material left behind."
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loren1
Posted: Jan 5 2009, 02:12 AM


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As always Andy, A great story. thumbsup.gif
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Andy in West Oz
Posted: Jan 7 2009, 12:10 AM


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It's quite exciting, isn't it, Patty?

Looks like they've found her:

http://www.powerboat-world.com/Museum-team...coast/52543/arc - great pic at link.

QUOTE
Australian National Maritime Museum archaeologists have almost certainly found the site of an intriguing 1829 shipwreck on the Great Barrier Reef some 20 km off the coast of North Queensland.

Scanning Flora Reef, 13 km east of the Frankland Islands off Cairns, they have found an anchor and other metal fittings which they consider probably mark the final resting place of HM Schooner Mermaid, a government vessel that ran aground and broke up on a voyage from Sydney to Port Raffles (in what is now the Northern Territory).

They hope to find further evidence in the next few days to confirm the vessel’s identity. 'This is an historically significant shipwreck, and there have been several attempts to locate where it happened – all of them unsuccessful so far,' the leader of the museum team, maritime archaeologist and curator Kieran Hosty, said today. 'There’s great excitement among the team at the strong prospect we’ve found it.'

The search team, which includes National Maritime Museum archaeologists and divers as well as scientists from James Cook University and the Museum of Tropical Queensland, set out from Cairns on New Year’s Day specifically to search for the Mermaid wreck site.

They targeted Flora Reef as earlier searches had discounted several other possible sites.

Scanning the seabed with magnetometers on Sunday afternoon (4 Jan) they located a site 'of interest' in 2.0 metres of water. Archaeologists dived and identified a length of anchor chain, rigging components, part of a magnetic compass and some copper-alloy hull fastenings, all apparently from a vessel of the early 19th century.

The team yesterday (Mon) made a further discovery – an iron anchor, also clearly from an early 19th century vessel.

'This is fairly strong evidence,' Kieran Hosty said today. 'In the official inquiry that followed the shipwreck, it was recorded that the crew threw an anchor overboard when the vessel was in trouble and tried to pull Mermaid off the reef… and they did this just a half a cable (150 metres) from the site where the ship finally ran aground and broke up.

'The anchor we’ve found is the right age, the right size, the right distance from the identified wreck site and in the right alignment.'

Mr Hosty said the museum team is now pegging out the area in order to carry out a thorough archaeological search for further corroborating evidence and for clues as to what happened on board the vessel on that fateful day.

Because of the age anchor and the other objects, the Flora Reef shipwreck site will now be protected under the Commonwealth Historic Shiprecks Act (1976).

Mermaid , a 21-metre wooden vessel built in India, was well known in Australian waters in the late 1820s, having circumnavigated the continent on a voyage of exploration under the command of Lieutenant Philip Parker King RN.

Parker King mapped vast lengths of coastline from Arnhem Land to Cape Leeuwin and King George Sound to the Great Barrier Reef.

Mermaid left Sydney for Port Raffles (Cobourg Peninsula) on 10 May, 1829. When it reached North Queensland its Captain, Samuel Nolbrow, had strict instructions to follow the safer inshore passage, inside the Barrier Reef.

For some unknown reason Nolbrow elected to take a shorter, more dangerous route through the reef which was (and still is) incompletely surveyed. In this he acted against the active advice of other officers on bvoard.
Mermaid ran aground and was wrecked on an unidentified reef on 13 June 1829. The captain and crew took to the ship’s boats and were rescued 11 days later by a passing merchant ship, the Admiral Gifford.

The present expedition, with 25 personnel in two Cairns-based research vessels Nimrod Explorer and Spoilsport, is being sponsored by the Silentworld Foundation, part of Silentworld Ltd, an Australian shipping company.

The research party includes two students and a teacher from Bega High School, the winners of a national essay and multimedia competition on maritime history and archaeology.

The students are producing an illustrated blog which they are posting daily on the National Maritime Museum’s website at http://anmm.wordpress.com/category/maritime-archaeology/
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loren1
Posted: Jan 8 2009, 11:14 PM


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To me, it's always exciting when a wreck is found and indentifed. Another piece of history is put on the books. I always look for this kind od things on Discovery Channel. When we are away for parts of summer we get National Geographgic Channel with many shows about wrecks. I love Chatteton and Kolher when they are on. thumbsup.gif
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DirkPitt
Posted: Jan 9 2009, 09:30 AM


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It seems every time they go out to locate a new wreck, they find it. A bloke should study up and get out there a find one for himself! beersmilie.gif

The Mermaid

user posted image
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tonym5
Posted: Jan 9 2009, 11:54 PM


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Anyone willing to finance this old bloke to find a ship in the name of the CCF? pirate.gif wave.gif
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Empress
Posted: Jan 10 2009, 11:47 PM


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That is a beautiful find! Thanks Andy
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loren1
Posted: Jan 11 2009, 01:50 AM


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QUOTE (tonym5 @ Jan 9 2009, 07:54 PM)
Anyone willing to finance this old bloke to find a ship in the name of the CCF? pirate.gif wave.gif

I'm with you Tony. I'm willing to look if someone will foot the bill. I have to time but no equiment. laugh.gif laugh.gif
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Andy in West Oz
Posted: Jan 11 2009, 10:23 PM


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QUOTE (DirkPitt @ Jan 9 2009, 09:30 AM)
It seems every time they go out to locate a new wreck, they find it. A bloke should study up and get out there a find one for himself! beersmilie.gif

It seems to be going that way, doesn't it, Tony? Of course, we know the amount of work that has to be put in beforehand...without Hiram and Max! laugh.gif

Thanks for the pic, she's a beautiful ship.

beersmilie.gif
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