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A boy in Scotland discovered wreckage from a 275-year-old vessel that once belonged to the British Royal Navy. The vessel ...
In 1788, while heading out to the whaling ground, it was wrecked in bad weather. All 56 crew members survived.
The HMS "Hind," later renamed the "Earl of Chatham," was a frigate in the British Royal Navy before it was repurposed as a ...
The hunt was initiated after a child was going for a run on a remote beach on Sanday, an island in Scotland, where he stumbled upon a wooden ship poking out of the sand. Archaeologists and historians ...
When a schoolboy going for a run found the ribs of a wooden ship poking through the dunes of a remote Scottish<a ...
The wreckage of a ship dating back to 1749 has now been identified, after spending hundreds of years buried beneath the sand.
A mix of science and historical sleuthing found that it's an 18th-century naval warship and whaling vessel called the Earl of Chatham.
These meats weren't necessarily common on American tables in the past, but people were eating them. Today, it's a different ...
The wreck was discovered in February 2024 after a storm swept away sand covering it on Sanday, one of the rugged Orkney Islands that lie off Scotland’s northern ... the vessel became a whaling ship, ...
The 12 tons of timber wreckage once made up the HMS Hind, a ship that took part in the Revolutionary War before being repurposed as a whaling ship.