Exploring Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale
Past Expedition
Overview
In August 2025, a team of maritime archaeologists and engineers conducted fieldwork in Lake Michigan’s Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast Marine National Sanctuary. Their goal was to test new technology and techniques for exploring deepwater shipwrecks — and learn more about our past. They focused on two known historically significant shipwrecks, collecting more detailed imagery of the wrecks than ever before and gaining a better understanding of how they met their fates and their conditions today.

The Saab Sabertooth hybrid autonomous underwater vehicle/remotely operated vehicle (AUV/ROV) during fieldwork for the Exploring Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale project. Hybrid vehicles like this one are capable of working in deep water either autonomously or via a tether. Image courtesy of Exploring Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale. Download largest version (jpg, 2 MB).

Recovering the Saab Sabertooth hybrid autonomous underwater vehicle/remotely operated vehicle (AUV/ROV) at the end of the day during the fieldwork of the Exploring Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale project. Image courtesy of Exploring Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale. Download largest version (jpg, 2 MB).
Maritime Heritage in the Great Lakes

Canal schooner Walter B. Allen. In April 1880, after a career of carrying grain and coal across the Great Lakes, Walter B. Allen ran ashore on South Manitou Island in Lake Michigan during a gale and sank to the bottom of the lake during recovery efforts. Today, it sits upright in 160 feet of water. Because the cold freshwater of the Great Lakes preserves wrecks remarkably well, the lakes offer some of the best conditions in the world for studying historic shipwrecks. Image courtesy of Becky Kagan Schott. Download largest version (jpg, 1 MB).
The Great Lakes and their connecting waterways form a natural corridor stretching over 1,000 miles into the heart of North America. For more than 10,000 years, people have used these inland seas for communication, food, exploration, settlement, and trade. An estimated 6,000 shipwrecks lie beneath the surface of the five lakes, including 1,200 in Lake Michigan alone—many still waiting to be discovered and explored.
Shipwreck Exploration
An introduction to the fieldwork operations for the Exploring Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale project. Video courtesy of Dale Pelecek. Download HD version (mp4, 135.7 MB)
Due to rough weather and technical glitches, the team adapted their original plan to explore a number of nationally significant shipwreck sites, focusing instead on collecting more detailed data at two of them: the schooner Northerner and the steamer Senator. Both had been explored before, but this time they used a hybrid autonomous underwater vehicle/remotely operated vehicle (AUV/ROV) equipped with acoustic, imaging, and laser scanning sensors — the same digital stills camera/laser system recently used to map and model Titanic. Along with new archaeological methods developed to capitalize on the efficiencies of autonomous and uncrewed vehicles, the team was able to collect large amounts of data in a short amount of time.

Map showing the locations of the shipwrecks explored and documented in August 2025 during the Exploring Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale project and their context within the boundaries of the sanctuary. Image courtesy of Exploring Wisconsin Shipwreck Coast National Marine Sanctuary at Scale. Download largest version (jpg, 564 KB).
Features
Features provide a deeper dive into project-related topics.
Multimedia
The images and video from this project add context and help bring the project to life. Click on a preview image below to view the full image/watch the video and get more information.
Education
Ocean Science for Educators provides the best of what the NOAA Ocean Exploration website has to offer to support educators in the classroom. Each theme page includes lessons, fact sheets, ocean facts, exploration notes, multimedia, and related past expeditions and projects. Below are the top education themes related to this project.
Team
Each team member’s path to this project is unique. Read their bios to find out what makes them ocean explorers.
Resources & Contacts
- Emily Crum
Communication Specialist
NOAA Ocean Exploration
ocean-explore-comms@noaa.gov - Vernon Smith
National Media Coordinator, NOAA Office of National Marine Sanctuaries
vernon.smith@noaa.gov



