Ship could
be HMS Erebus or HMS Terror, both of which vanished on expedition to fabled
Northwest Passage
theguardian.com,
Agencies in Ottawa, Tuesday 9 September
2014
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| A sonar image of the ship on the sea floor in northern Canada. Photograph: AP |
A British
ship that disappeared in the Arctic more than 160 years ago has been found,
helping to clear up an enduring historical mystery, the Canadian prime
minister, Stephen Harper, announced on Tuesday.
The HMS
Erebus and HMS Terror were last seen in the late 1845 when the British arctic
explorer Sir John Franklin and 128 hand-picked officers and men vanished on an
expedition to find the fabled Northwest Passage.
Their
disappearance prompted one of history's largest and longest rescue searches,
which lasted until 1859, but no sign of either ship was found.
Canadian
divers and archaeologists had been trying since 2008 to find the ships, which
became ice-bound off King William Island in the Victoria Strait in the Arctic
territory of Nunavut.
Harper
said: "This is truly a historic moment for Canada. 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."
The mystery
has gripped Canadians for generations, in part because of the crew's grisly
fate. Inuit say the desperate men resorted to cannibalism before they died.
Harper's
government began searching for Franklin's ships 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.
The
original search for the ships helped open up parts of the Canadian Arctic for
discovery back in the 1850s.
A ship was
found on Sunday, using a remotely operated underwater vehicle, Harper said,
although it remains unclear which vessel it is.
The
discovery comes shortly after a team of archeologists found a tiny fragment
from the Franklin expedition. Searchers discovered an iron fitting that once
helped support a boat from one of the doomed expedition's ships in the King
William Island search area.
Franklin's
vessels are among the most sought-after prizes in marine archaeology. Harper
said the discovery would shed light on what happened to Franklin's crew.
Tantalising
traces have been found over the years, including the bodies of three crewmen
discovered in the 1980s.
The bodies
of two English seamen – John Hartnell, 25, and Royal Marine William Braine, 33
– were exhumed in 1986. An expedition uncovered the perfectly preserved remains
of a petty officer, John Torrington, 20, in an ice-filled coffin in 1984.
Experts
believe the ships were lost in 1848 after they became locked in the ice near
King William Island and that the crews abandoned them in a hopeless bid to
reach safety.
The search
for an Arctic passage to Asia frustrated explorers for centuries, beginning
with John Cabot's voyage in 1497. Eventually it became clear that a passage did
exist, but was too far north for practical use. Cabot, the Italian-British
explorer, died in 1498 while trying to find it and the shortcut eluded other
famous explorers including Henry Hudson and Francis Drake.
No sea
crossing was successful until Roald Amundsen of Norway completed his trip from
1903-1906.

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