16 March 2016

Shipwreck for the day

Sarah Kaplan has an article in The Washington Post about an old shipwreck:


Standing atop the rugged, barren peak of al-Hallaniyah Island, eyeing the blue-gray Arabian Sea as it lashed the rocky coast below, David Mearns tried to transport himself back five hundred years.
The sky was dark with storm clouds, the sea a raging, surging maelstrom. Two ships, heedlessly anchored on the exposed northern side of the island, were whipped about by the winds and waves, stretching their moorings to the breaking point. Once adrift, the wooden vessels were driven shoreward and bashed against the rocks. One got close enough to the beach for its crew to escape before it broke apart completely. The other splintered and sank in deep water, dragging everyone on board, including its captain, to the bottom of the sea.
Mearns had spent half a year reading accounts of that disaster, which doomed part of a fleet led by the legendary Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama. He’d internalized everything he could find about the weather, the vessels, the island, the perils of the Arabian Sea during the Golden Age of Exploration. half a millennium ago. And he knew that at least one unparalleled example of a ship from that time lay somewhere within his reach. If only he could find it.
“Our team stood at the top of the island and watched the waves come in, and put themselves in the place of the Portuguese, where they would have anchored and where the storm would have dashed them along the coastline,” Mearns told National Geographic. But the initial search didn’t take much more time than the visualization: “Then they snorkeled around and, in twenty minutes, started seeing cannonballs that were obviously from a European ship.”
That was in 1998. It would be another decade and a half before Mearns’ shipwreck salvage company, Blue Water Recoveries, returned to conduct a full excavation of the site, in partnership with the Ministry of Heritage and Culture in Oman. Pushed around by high-energy wave surges the divers called “the washing machine,” the ship and its riches had been buried deep in sand at the bottom of the sea.
But, in the end, Mearns announced at a recent press conference in Muscat, the archaeologists did find what they were looking for. The wreck uncovered off the coast of al-Hallaniyah is almost certainly da Gama’s ship, the Esmeralda, which sank with its captain and da Gama’s uncle, the swashbuckling, rapacious Vincente Sodré, on board in 1503.
A report on the find published in the journal Nautical Archaeology is still considered “interim”, as thousands of artifacts dug up from the wreck site have yet to be analyzed. But, if Mearns’ conclusion is borne out, the Esmeralda will be the oldest ship from the Age of Exploration ever to be excavated.
“It is fascinating to work on a site that is involved in such early European maritime connections with the Indies,” Dave Parham, a professor at Bournemouth University and the archaeological director of the expedition, said in a press release. “The armaments that the site has produced are already providing us with information about the martial nature of these voyages, and the site has the potential to tell us much more about the men and ships that undertook these adventures and the peoples that they encountered.”
Among those armaments are a bronze ship’s bell dated 1498, the earliest ship’s bell to be discovered, a copper alloy disc bearing the Portuguese royal coat of arms, thought to be part of an astrolabe and, rarest of all, a tiny silver medallion known as “the ghost coin of Dom Manuel I.
The coin, minted by Portuguese King Dom Manuel in 1499, was an indio, specially made for trade with India. It’s a “ghost” because, until now, only one has ever been found.
The discovery of the second ghost coin hints at what the ill-fated Esmeralda was doing in the Arabian Sea in the first place. She’d been part of a massive armada led by da Gama in order to conduct trade and, in many cases, wage war, in India. The fleet followed the route famously pioneered by da Gama four years earlier: a circuitous, twenty-four-thousand-mile voyage around the Cape of Good Hope and up Africa’s eastern coast that took the better part of a year and killed the better part of da Gama’s crew. Nevertheless, his carreira da India provided the first link between Europe and the spices of the East that didn’t depend on overland routes controlled by Arab traders and Venetian merchants. To fifteenth century Portugal, eager for trade riches and finally some flavor in their food, da Gama’s new route was a very big deal.
That first successful voyage was a turning point in world history: the beginning of the ages of exploration, imperialism, and globalization, with all their change and brutality. What happened on da Gama’s second voyage, including the demise of the Esmeralda, was a grim harbinger of the violent centuries that lay ahead for both the colonized and the colonizers.
The armada set out in 1502, the fourth such fleet to be sent by King Dom Manuel. Its predecessors hadn’t fared well, as the people of Calicut (now Kozhikode, on India’s western coast) didn’t take kindly to being bossed around by entitled Europeans, and the Portuguese had responded by bombarding the city to shreds.
So da Gama’s fleet was well-stocked with weaponry and given broad license to use it. He tried (not entirely successfully) to subdue uncooperative Indian kingdoms and attacked any other ships he encountered in the Indian Ocean, including one carrying Muslim pilgrims on their way back from Mecca. Da Gama burned the boat, along with its three hundred passengers, according to an eyewitness, sparing only seventeen children who were then baptized without their consent.
When he headed back to Portugal in early 1503, da Gama left behind a squadron of five ships led by his two uncles, Vincente and Brás Sodré, to keep doing more of the same. The goal, according to the Nautical Archaeology report, was “to forcibly control and dominate the spice trade.”
The Sodré brothers had their own ideas, though. Rather than patrol the Indian coast, they set out for the Gulf of Aden, which was full of lucrative opportunities for piracy on the high seas. They spent the next several months capturing Arab ships, plundering their cargo and killing their crews. According to an account from one of the other commanders, the Sodrés’ decision rankled the rest of the squadron; not so much because of the violence it involved, but because crew members wanted a cut of the loot.
By April, monsoon season had arrived, and one of the ships was in need of repairs, so the squadron retired to al-Hallaniyah for some rest and trade. The local fishermen warned the Portuguese that their choice of port, on the exposed windward side of the island, was a poor one, but the Europeans were recklessly confident in the strength of their iron anchors and hulking ships. They moved the squadron’s smaller ships to the other side of the island, away from the fiercest winds, but left Vincente Sodré’s Esmeralda and BrásSão Pedro where they were.
Their haughtiness proved deadly: When the storm came, both vessels were dashed against the rocky shore. Vincente went down with his ship, and Brás died not long after of undetermined causes.
Five hundred years later, it seems that the ship that bore Vincente’s ambitions and loot has finally been found. But the Sodré brothers and the hundred or so crew members who died with them are still missing.
According to National Geographic, a survey of al-Hallaniyah revealed dozens of burial cairns that are thought to be non-Islamic (they’re oriented differently than burial sites for Muslims). But when the sites were excavated, researchers couldn’t find any human remains. It’s likely that the buried bodies deteriorated from prolonged exposure to animals and the elements. It was those missing men that Mearns thought about during his long search for the Esmeralda. “A shipwreck site is not a pretty thing,” he told National Geographic. “It’s the scene of a tragedy. It’s a place you have to treat with respect, because many people died there.”
War History Online has an article about some newer shipwrecks:

An area where many World War Two vessels lie wrecked at the bottom of the sea has become known as the Graveyard of the Atlantic. A three-week research investigation has taken place in the area to find out exactly how many and what vessels lie beneath the waves.
The area is just off the coast of North Carolina, and contains many World War Two vessels, including those from the American Navy, the British Royal Navy, supply and merchant ships, as well as German vessels and U-boats.
All were sunk in what was known as the Battle of the Atlantic, as Germany tried to stop supply ships from the US from making their way to the United Kingdom. Researchers hope that the investigation will help historians understand what happened to the vessels, which haven’t been investigated since they were sunk more than seventy years ago.
The USS Monitor National Marine Sanctuary is leading the expedition, alongside the University of North Carolina. They are attempting to document all of the historic shipwrecks from World War Two.
The three-week research trip took place over the summer of 2015, and was mainly tasked with discovering the condition of the vessels before assessing how best to preserve the sites. Researchers hope to obtain a lot of information from one of the world’s darkest eras.
Some of the wrecks lie just a hundred or so feet under the surface, and many are being disturbed by recreational activity, such as diving and boating.
The researchers are using remote sensing technologies and sonar systems to locate the different wrecks. They are also taking high-definition images of the wreckage so that the vessels can be identified and documented.
The British HMT Bedfordshire, a sea-faring trawler, is one of the vessels being mapped out and surveyed from a distance. It was sunk in 1942 by a torpedo fired from a German U-boat. The trawler’s entire crew perished in the battle.
Researchers are also making note of the marine life that makes its home in and around the wrecks. The area is serving as an artificial reef for marine life in the area.
The entire area has been designated as a War Grave, and regulations are in place so the site cannot be disturbed by researchers or civilians. 
Rico says the sea hates to give up her secrets...

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