List of shipwrecks in international waters
This is a list of shipwrecks located in international waters.
Arctic Ocean
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
USS Jeannette | United States Navy | 13 June 1881 | A Philomel-class gunboat that was converted into an Arctic exploration vessel, and became trapped in the ice near Wrangel Island. The ship remained trapped for 21 months, and was carried some distance northeast before sinking; three of the De Long Islands were discovered and named by her crew along the way. | 77°15′N 154°59′E |
Barents Sea
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
HMS Achates | Royal Navy | 31 December 1942 | An A-class destroyer that was sunk 135 nautical miles southeast of Bear Island, in the Battle of the Barents Sea. | 73°18′N 30°6′E |
RFA Aldersdale | Royal Navy | 7 July 1942 | A Dale-class oil tanker that was damaged by aircraft and sunk by U-457. | 75°0′N 45°0′E |
SS Andrew G. Curtin | United States | 26 January 1944 | A Liberty ship that was torpedoed by U-716.[1] | 73°22′N 24°15′E |
HMS Bickerton | Royal Navy | 22 August 1944 | A Buckley-class destroyer escort that was torpedoed by U-354 and scuttled. | 71°42′N 19°11′E |
BO-229 | Soviet Navy | 7 December 1944 | A SC-497 class submarine chaser that was sunk by U-997. Originally the USS SC-1485 for the United States Navy before being lend-leased to the Soviet Navy on 8 July 1944.[2][3] | 69°28′N 34°19′E |
BO-230 | Soviet Navy | 5 December 1944 | A SC-497 class submarine chaser that was sunk by U-365. Originally the USS SC-1477 for the United States Navy before being lend-leased to the Soviet Navy on 19 July 1944.[4][5] | 69°29′N 35°12′E |
SS Daniel Morgan | United States | 5 July 1942 | A Liberty ship that was torpedoed by U-88.[6] | 75°08′N 45°06′E |
HMS Edinburgh | Royal Navy | 2 May 1942 | A Town-class light cruiser that was scuttled 400 kilometres northeast of Kola Bay, Russia. | 72°N 35°E |
SS Edward H. Crockett | United States | 29 September 1944 | A Liberty ship that was torpedoed by U-310.[7] | 72°59′N 24°26′E |
SS Empire Byron | United Kingdom | 5 July 1942 | A cargo ship that was torpedoed by U-703. | 76°18′N 33°30′E |
SS Empire Cowper | United Kingdom | 11 April 1942 | A cargo ship that was bombed by German aircraft. | 71°01′N 36°00′E |
SS El Occidente | United States | 13 April 1942 | A cargo ship that was torpedoed by U-435. | 73.2°N 28.3°E |
Z16 Friedrich Eckoldt | Kriegsmarine | 31 December 1942 | A Type 1934A-class destroyer that was sunk by HMS Sheffield in the Battle of the Barents Sea. | 77°19′N 30°47′E |
FV Gaul | United Kingdom | 8–9 February 1974 | A British fishing vessel that disappeared without trace; the wreck was not discovered until 1997. | |
HMS Goodall | Royal Navy | 29 April 1945 | A Captain class frigate that was scuttled the following day after being torpedoed by U-286.[8] | 69°25′N 33°38′E |
M-175 | Soviet Navy | 10 January 1942 | A Soviet M-class submarine that was sunk by U-584.[9] | 70°09′N 32°50′E |
HMS Matabele | Royal Navy | 17 January 1942 | A Tribal class destroyer that was torpedoed by U-454.[10] | 69°21′N 35°27′E |
SS Thomas Scott | United States | 17 February 1945 | A Liberty ship that was torpedoed by U-968.[11] | 69°30′N 34°42′E |
HMS Trinidad | Royal Navy | 15 May 1942 | A Crown Colony-class cruiser that was attacked by German bombers and scuttled north of North Cape, Norway. | 73°37′N 23°27′E |
SM U-28 | Kriegsmarine | 2 September 1917 | A Type U 27 U-boat that attacked the SS Olive Branch at close range, 85 miles northeast of North Cape, Norway. The gunfire detonated the Olive Branch's cargo of munitions, and the U-boat was sunk in the resultant explosion. | 72°34′N 27°56′E |
U-288 | Kriegsmarine | 3 April 1944 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by British aircraft southeast of Bear Island. | 73°44′N 27°12′E |
U-314 | Kriegsmarine | 30 January 1944 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by HMS Whitehall and HMS Meteor southeast of Bear Island. | 73°41′N 24°30′E |
U-354 | Kriegsmarine | 24 August 1944 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by British ships northeast of North Cape. | 72°49′N 30°41′E |
U-425 | Kriegsmarine | 17 February 1945 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by HMS Lark and HMS Alnwick Castle near Murmansk, Russia. | 69°39′N 35°50′E |
U-457 | Kriegsmarine | 16 September 1942 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by HMS Impulsive northeast of Murmansk, Russia. | 75°05′N 43°15′E |
U-472 | Kriegsmarine | 4 March 1943 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by HMS Onslaught and British aircraft southeast of Bear Island. | 73°05′N 26°40′E |
U-585 | Kriegsmarine | 30 March 1942 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by a German mine north of Murmansk, Russia. | 70°00′N 34°00′E |
U-589 | Kriegsmarine | 14 September 1942 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by HMS Onslow and a British aircraft. | 75°40′N 20°32′E |
U-655 | Kriegsmarine | 24 March 1942 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was rammed by HMS Sharpshooter. | 73°00′N 21°00′E |
Greenland Sea
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
RFA Gray Ranger | Royal Navy | 22 September 1942 | A fleet support tanker that was torpedoed by U-435. | 70°N 11°W |
Hinrich Freese | Kriegsmarine | 12 November 1940 | A weather ship that was deliberately run aground on Jan Mayen to prevent capture. | |
Lauenburg | Kriegsmarine | 28 June 1941 | A German weather ship that was captured and scuttled by four Allied warships, in order to acquire important codebooks and parts of an Enigma machine. | 71°00′N 8°20′W |
SS Oliver Ellsworth | United States | 13 September 1942 | A Liberty ship that was torpedoed by U-408 about 100 miles southwest of Spitsbergen, Norway. | 75°52′N 7°55′E |
SS Santa Rosa | United States | 13 September 1942 | An ocean liner that was sunk by German forces 198 miles northwest of Bear Island. | 76.00°N 09.30°E |
HMS Somali | Royal Navy | 20 September 1942 | A Tribal-class destroyer that was torpedoed by U-703 and sank under tow north of Iceland. | 69°11′N 15°32′W |
SS Stalingrad | Soviet Union | 13 September 1942 | A cargo ship that was torpedoed by U-408 about 100 miles southwest of Spitsbergen, Norway. | 75°52′N 7°55′E |
U-88 | Kriegsmarine | 12 September 1942 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by HMS Faulknor south of Svalbard. | 75°04′N 04°49′E |
U-289 | Kriegsmarine | 31 May 1944 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by HMS Milne northeast of Jan Mayen Island. | 73°32′N 00°28′E |
U-408 | Kriegsmarine | 5 November 1942 | A Type VIIC U-boat that was sunk by an American aircraft north of Iceland. | 67°40′N 18°32′W |
Atlantic Ocean
Indian Ocean
Pacific Ocean
Southern Ocean
Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
MY Ady Gil | New Zealand | 7 January 2010 | A trimaran, formerly named Earthrace, that broke the global circumnavigation record in 2008. It was later converted into an anti-whaling ship, and was sunk in a collision with MV Shōnan Maru 2, sparking a series of legal disputes. | 64°01′50″S 143°05′23″E |
MV Explorer | Liberia | 23 November 2007 | A cruise ship that hit an iceberg in the Bransfield Strait. | 62.404882°S 57.196247°W |
San Telmo | Spain | 2 September 1819 | A ship of the line that sank in a storm in Drake Passage. | 62°20′S 60°30′W |
Further reading
- Jurisi, Mario, Ancient Shipwrecks of the Adriatic: maritime transport during the first and second centuries AD. (British archaeological reports: International series, 828) Oxford, Tempus Reparatum, 2000 ISBN 1-84171-039-3
- Parker, A. J., Ancient Shipwrecks of the Mediterranean and the Roman provinces, (Oxford, 1992)
- Pickford, Nigel, Lost Treasure Ships of the Northern Seas: a guide and gazetteer to 2000 years of shipwreck, (London: Chatham, 2006)
External links
- WRECKSITE Worldwide free database of + 65,000 wrecks with history, maritime charts and GPS positions
References
- "Andrew G. Curtin". uboat.net. Retrieved August 1, 2023.
- "BO-229". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
- "USS SC-1485 (SC-1485)". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
- "BO-230". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
- "USS SC-1477 (SC-1477)". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
- "Daniel Morgan". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
- "Edward H. Crockett". uboat.net. Retrieved August 1, 2023.
- "HMS Goodall (K 479)". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
- "M-175". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
- "HMS Matabele (G 26)". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
- "Thomas Scott". uboat.net. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.