It’s the other Titanic, the story of a mighty ship sunk not by the grandeur of nature but by the grimness of man. “There’s a lot of lost souls down there.”įew tales in history are more haunting, more tangled with investigatory mazes or more fraught with toxic secrets than that of the final voyage of the Lusitania, one of the colossal tragedies of maritime history. “It will always be a scary place, a daunting place,” he told me. Even though he had dived the great wreck dozens of times before, the expression on his face was that of a spooked man. “You could just scoop the stuff up!” But then he turned somber. “There’s thousands of cases of ammo down in that hole!” one of the Irish divers cried out. One of the divers peeled back the lid, and the corroded ammunition greeted fresh air for the first time in 93 years. 303 rounds they’d found inside the plankton-hazed ruins, rounds that had been manufactured in America and bought by the British to kill Germans during World War I. When they came aboard, the gleeful explorers, part of a marine archaeology expedition sanctioned by the Irish government, produced a piece of history - a plastic container holding a handful of. Lusitania as sport divers returned triumphantly to the surface. One day seven years ago, while on a magazine assignment, I found myself on a boat off the coast of Ireland, bobbing in dark, heavy seas 300 feet above the slumbering wreck of the R.M.S.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |