Blog post | 05-01-2018 | Leon Derksen
With the information brought to us by Mr. Yoshida in our last blog post, we finally come to discussing the alleged anchor of the ...
Blog post | 22-12-2017 | Leon Derksen
The previous blog ended with Mr. Yoshida informing the project team of the locations of a number of shipwrecks, including two ...
Blog post | 11-12-2017 | Leon Derksen
The project team consisted of prof. dr. Akifumi Iwabuchi and 3rd-year underwater archaeology student Hiromu Akamatsu, both of ...
Blog post | 19-11-2017 | Leon Derksen
The story of the Kanrin Maru begins in 1853. At the time, the shogunate (then ruling military government of Japan) ordered a ...
Blog post | 09-11-2017 | Martijn Manders
The research within the ‘Shipwrecks of The Roaring Forties’ project continues with fieldwork from Nov 1st until Nov 11nd 2017 on ...
Blog post | 12-07-2017 | Robert de Hoop
The #Rooswijk1740 project is unique as so many groups are able to participate. Especially for students in maritime archaeology ...
Blog post | 21-02-2017 | Martijn Manders
So thank you, the team in Ramsgate: Mark James, Alex Hildred, Dan Pascoe, Johan Opdebeeck, Pete Magowan, Mark Hobbs, Graham ...
Blog post | 20-02-2017 | Robert de Hoop
On Tuesday we left Christmas Island and went to the Cocos-Keeling Islands. The Cocos-Keeling Islands are a group of 27 coral ...
The Wreck Check team were conscious that the 7-day stay on Cocos Keeling Islands was a narrow window of survey opportunity, but ...
We are now reasonably confident that the 1724 Fortuyn does not lie between 0-30 meters in the water off Christmas Island. We have ...