WEBVTT 1 00:00:06.080 --> 00:00:08.760 Did we find a new shipwreck? There is something. 2 00:00:09.240 --> 00:00:11.160 We can all definitely agree this is manmade. 3 00:00:13.360 --> 00:00:14.080 Wow. 4 00:00:15.400 --> 00:00:19.640 I've been doing this for 9.5 years and I've always wanted to find a shipwreck. 5 00:00:22.080 --> 00:00:23.160 How long's the ship? Do you know? 6 00:00:23.440 --> 00:00:26.120 Thirty-eight meters to about 10 wide. 7 00:00:27.480 --> 00:00:30.080 And this didn't show up in the multibeam? 8 00:00:30.760 --> 00:00:36.160 This multibeam was gridded at 50 meters resolution, so we were unable to see this target when planning, 9 00:00:37.480 --> 00:00:41.720 but we did pick the highest slope to do this test engineering dive on and luckily stumbled upon it, 10 00:00:42.000 --> 00:00:43.720 but it wasn't in the grid that we had. 11 00:00:44.720 --> 00:00:46.720 This is exploration at its finest. 12 00:00:56.840 --> 00:00:58.840 It's amazing, the craftsmanship that used to go into these. 13 00:01:02.160 --> 00:01:07.440 What we're actually looking at is the bottom of the hull of an ocean-going wooden sailing vessel. 14 00:01:08.480 --> 00:01:13.240 The upper portions have been consumed by marine organisms because they weren't copper sheathed. 15 00:01:13.280 --> 00:01:16.560 That copper was there to protect the hull during its sailing life. 16 00:01:17.160 --> 00:01:23.440 And by the 1830s, pretty much everybody that's going to do a deep-ocean voyage is coppered. 17 00:01:24.480 --> 00:01:34.360 Just looking at this style, the thickness of the copper, I'm thinking we're probably a little later than 19th century, more towards about 1850. 18 00:01:35.120 --> 00:01:39.800 That's just a guess, based on the copper alone. There's all sorts of things that we have to look at. 19 00:01:42.000 --> 00:01:43.000 What do you have on the edge there? 20 00:01:43.320 --> 00:01:48.000 Those are numbers. 2109. Looks like we found a name for the wreck. 21 00:01:55.640 --> 00:01:57.640 I'm wondering if this is burned wood here. 22 00:01:58.160 --> 00:02:00.560 It may well be burned, Joe. That's a good observation. 23 00:02:01.200 --> 00:02:03.800 This wreck is remarkably free of artifacts. 24 00:02:04.160 --> 00:02:10.280 It almost makes you wonder if this was at the end of its life and it just was easier to burn it. 25 00:02:10.880 --> 00:02:13.600 Who knows? I mean, leaves all sorts of questions. 26 00:02:19.400 --> 00:02:25.400 We all just want to thank you guys for, one, finding this on a shakedown engineering dive, 27 00:02:26.320 --> 00:02:30.600 and two, getting us all linked in and the opportunity to do this. 28 00:02:31.280 --> 00:02:32.600 A great start to the season.