Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
That Whydah Gally had eluded discovery for over 260 years became even more surprising when the wreck was found under just 14 feet (4.3 m) of water and 5 feet (1.5 m) of sand. [2] The ship's location has been the site of extensive underwater archaeology, and more than 200,000 individual pieces have since been retrieved.
The 160 passengers and most of the freight were landed on the Oregon shore. [23] Towed in to drydock at Cascade Locks around 1 September. The hull was found to be a "complete wreck." [24] Columbia River: Cascade Locks: Gypsy: 11 June 1900: Tore hole in bottom and sank in ten feet (3.0 m) of water. [25] Steamship: Willamette River: Independence ...
A man riding a Jet Ski stumbled across the wreckage, a local museum says.
A 70-year-old retiree-turned-amateur shipwreck hunter discovered the wooden vessels, each 80 to 100 feet long, in the Neches River on Aug. 16, according to the Ice House Museum in Silsbee, Texas.
In a time of puddling water and exposed sandbars, Bill Milner, who grew up on the river, found the last resting place of five sizable ships along the Lower Neches near Beaumont on Aug. 18.
The locks could raise a vessel 14' at high water and 24' at low water. [3] The lock gates were 56 feet (17 m) wide and 90 feet (27 m) high. The locks were carefully designed to address the great variation in the height of the river, the difference between high and low water being 55 feet (17 m).
In the natural condition of the river, Portland was the farthest point on the river where the water was deep enough to allow ocean-going ships. Rapids further upstream at Clackamas were a hazard to navigation, and all river traffic had to portage around Willamette Falls, where Oregon City had been established as the first major town inland from Astoria.
The captain-turned-pirate sank the stolen ship 170 years ago, ... Metal detectorist found it 2,800 years later. Ancient find suggests Oregon had one of North America’s oldest human-occupied sites.