ARCHAEOLOGY

THE WRECKS OF EREBUS AND TERROR

aptain John Franklin set sail from England in May 1845 with 133 men and two ships—HMS and HMS —in search of the Northwest Passage. The crews of two whaling ships that sighted the expedition that August were the last Europeans to see Franklin and his crew alive, sparking a nearly 170-year maritime mystery. Search parties sent to northern Canada occasionally happened upon ominous clues: items left behind by the expedition, grim testimonies from Inuit witnesses, and even a note left by a crewman on King William Island in 1847 stating that the two ships had become trapped in the ice. In 2014, Canadian authorities announced that researchers had finally located at the bottom of Wilmot and Crampton Bay. Two years later, was found around 45 miles away. Both wrecks are remarkably well preserved and, in recent years, underwater archaeologists have explored the ships’ cabins and retrieved hundreds of objects, which are helping experts piece together the final days of Franklin’s fateful voyage

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from ARCHAEOLOGY

ARCHAEOLOGY2 min read
Artifact
The image of a medieval knight moving slowly and stiffly under the tremendous weight of his costly armor as he readies for battle or a joust is firmly fixed in people’s imagination. But, according to art historian Matthias Goll, much of this vision i
ARCHAEOLOGY12 min read
High Priestesses Of Copper Age Spain
NOT FAR FROM THE Andalusian coast in southwestern Iberia, an unusual group of women was laid to rest around 4,800 years ago. Their communal tomb, known as the Montelirio tholos, was built into the east side of a natural hill. A 125-foot-long subterra
ARCHAEOLOGY2 min read
The Storm God’s City
By the early thirteenth century B.C., the rulers of the Hittite Empire (ca. 1650–1200 B.C.) controlled most of central Anatolia and had expanded their territory by conquering new lands in western Anatolia and Syria. King Muwatalli II (reigned ca. 129

Related Books & Audiobooks