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Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 6:48 pm
by Halsey
Anyone have a link to this finding?

French battleship discovered in the Med.
Sunk by a U-Boat in 1917.

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 7:12 pm
by cantona2
No link but heres the article posted from another forum
Danton wreck found in deep water
By Jonathan Amos
Science reporter, BBC News

Danton (Musée National de la Marine)
The Danton was carrying over 1,000 men at the time

A French battleship sunk in 1917 by a German submarine has been discovered in remarkable condition on the floor of the Mediterranean Sea.
The Danton, with many of its gun turrets still intact, is sitting upright in over 1,000m of water.
It was found by the Fugro geosciences company during a survey for a gas pipeline between Algeria and Italy.
The Danton, which sank with 296 sailors still onboard, lies 35km southwest of the island of Sardinia.
Naval historians record that the Danton's Captain Delage stood on the bridge with his officers and made no attempt to leave the ship as it went down.
Danton (Galsi/Fugro)
The ship dug out the sediment as it hit the seafloor

The French government is now keen to see that the site is protected.
"Its condition is extraordinary," said Rob Hawkins, project director with Fugro GeoConsulting Limited.
Multi-beam Echo-sounder 'Point Cloud Images' of Danton guns (Galsi/Fugro)
Despite tumbling through the water, many guns stayed in place
"After it was hit by the torpedoes, the Danton clearly turned turtle and rotated several times. You can see where it dropped some infrastructure on the way down and then impacted on the seabed.
"You can see where it slid along the seabed before coming to a rest," he told BBC News.
A comparison with the original plans for the battleship - in particular, the position of its 240mm guns - confirms the wreck's identity.
The final resting place is a few kilometres from where people have traditionally thought the ship met its end.
"The French Admiralty did argue with us for a while that it should have been several nautical miles away, but we reminded them that modern GPS methods are more accurate than the sextants they used in those days," said Mr Hawkins.
Details of the discovery were released on Thursday at a press conference at the Museum of Science and Technology in Milan.
Sardinia map (BBC)
The wreck is just off the point where the southern pipeline meets Sardina
The pipeline is being built by the Galsi (Gasdotto Algeria Sardegna Italia) consortium and will be the deepest underwater conduit for gas ever constructed when it becomes operational in 2012.
Finding a safe route for it was extremely challenging, said Mr Hawkins..
About 20% of the course lies on the abyssal plain in water depths of about 2,850m. There are also steep descents from the continental shelf.
Fugro deployed its Autonomous Underwater Vehicle to gather bathymetric (depth) and geophysical data.
It also used Remotely Operated Vehicles to make more detailed surveys of particular locations, such as where sediment conditions were uncertain or the route crossed known submarine telecommunications cables.
The discovery of the Danton, named after the French revolutionary Georges Danton, means the 66cm-diameter pipe has to take a slight detour to avoid the war grave.
AUV (Fugro)
Fugro can deploy an array of geophysical survey equipment
The ship was less than 10 years old at the time of its loss, but already outclassed by the newer HMS Dreadnought design being introduced by the British.
The 19,000-tonne, 150m-long vessel was carrying over 1,000 men when it was attacked by Germany's U-64 submarine at 1317 on 18 March, 1917. Patrol boats and a destroyer managed to save most of those onboard.
The Danton was travelling between Toulon and Corfu, where it was due to meet up with other vessels in the French fleet. Many of those making the trip were actually crewmembers for the other ships at Corfu.

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 7:38 pm
by Dili

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Thu Feb 19, 2009 8:11 pm
by Micke II

2 photos of this battleship of 19 000 tonnes launched in 1910.

1911 in Toulon

Image[/img]

During the sinking not far from Sardinia.
260 men among 1000 went down with the ship.


Image[/[/img]

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 2:27 am
by Ron Saueracker
Amazing how ugly Victorian era French ships were. Gawd they were ugly. Not until the 1930s were French ships attractive once again.

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 5:28 am
by castor troy
ORIGINAL: Micke II


2 photos of this battleship of 19 000 tonnes launched in 1910.

1911 in Toulon

Image[/img]

During the sinking not far from Sardinia.
260 men among 1000 went down with the ship.


Image[/[/img]

now that´s an uggly ship

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 7:29 am
by Howard Mitchell
Article here on the BBC website, including some small pictures, maps and a brief video clip:
 
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/7898890.stm

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 8:20 am
by Monter_Trismegistos
ORIGINAL: Ron Saueracker
Amazing how ugly Victorian era French ships were. Gawd they were ugly. Not until the 1930s were French ships attractive once again.
She was built during Edwardian era actually...

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 8:39 am
by Mike Scholl
ORIGINAL: Monter_Trismegistos

ORIGINAL: Ron Saueracker
Amazing how ugly Victorian era French ships were. Gawd they were ugly. Not until the 1930s were French ships attractive once again.
She was built during Edwardian era actually...


True..., but she is still UGLY!

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 10:03 am
by Dili
And it is far from the worse http://www.cityofart.net/bship/brennus.html they remind me of french planes of 30's..

RE: Danton wreck found after 90 years

Posted: Fri Feb 20, 2009 1:12 pm
by Midnight19D