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MV Plassy or Plassey, was a cargo vessel in the Irish Merchant Service, operating during the 1950s. It was built as HMSJuliet, a Shakespearian-class naval trawler of the Royal Navy at the start of the Second World War, and sold into merchant service at the end of the conflict. AsPlassyit was wrecked in a storm off Inisheer, and is best known as the wreck seen on the f...
MV Rozi was a tugboat, built in Bristol in 1958. She was originally called Rossmore, and was later renamed Rossgarth. She was sold to Tug Malta in 1981 as the Rozi and operated in the Grand Harbour. After being decommissioned, she was scuttled off ÄŠirkewwa as an artificial reef. It is now one of the most popular dive sites in Malta.
MVRoziwas built in Bristol in 1958 ...
The Salem Express was a passenger ship that sank in the Red Sea. It is controversial due to the tragic loss of life which occurred when she sank shortly after midnight on December 17, 1991.
The Salem Express was a roll on, roll off car & passenger ferry that operated between the ports of Safaga (in Egypt) and Jeddah (Saudi Arabia). On one such return journey from ...
Navagio Beach or the Shipwreck, is an isolated sandy cove on Zakynthos island and one of the most famous beaches in Greece. It is notable because it is home to the wreck of the alleged smuggler ship Panagiotis; thus, it is often referred to as 'Smugglers Cove'.
Navagio is located on the north-west shore of the Ionian island of Zakynthos (Zante), in the Municipality o...
Sidewheel steamboats dominated the Great Lakes at the beginning of the “shipwreck century.” Before railroads, these fast ships proved the best way to travel. Tens of thousands of immigrants, ambitious entrepreneurs, and adventure-seeking tourists first explored the Midwest on these steamers.
The sidewheeler Vermillion entered service in 1838. In 1842, the...
The Nippo Maru was a 106 metre-long freighter. She sank near Tonoas and came to rest upright at a depth of ~50 metres.
The deck is at ~40 metres with the top of the wreck at ~30 metres.
Map location is only an approximate location of the wreck.
On Saturday night, November 19, 1966, Nordmeer was traveling to Chicago from Hamburg, Germany, with a cargo of 990 coils of steel destined for Milwaukee. It was the ocean-going vessel’s first freshwater voyage. The night was clear. About seven miles north of Thunder Bay Island, the “salty” turned inside the flashing buoy marking Thunder Bay...
Ocean City is a 189-foot 50-car ferry built in 1928 that now site aground in Oro Bay on Anderson Island in the South Puget Sound. Originally steam-powered, it was built for the Reading Railroad. Ocean City was brught from the East Coast to Puget Sound via the Panama canal, a 7,000 mile, 54-day trip.
The “Ocean Pursuit,” a commercial scallop boat, wrecked in Oregon Inlet on March 1, 2020. The 73-foot-long steel-hull ship ran into shallow water along the northern edge of the navigation channel. It is slowly sinks deeper and deeper into the beach.
It was removed in Nov 2021.
The Farne Islands are a group of islands off the coast of Northumberland, England. The Islands are a popular scuba diving location, with a variety of sites suitable for all levels of diver. The islands appeal to divers for the seals and wrecks. The grey seal colony at the Farnes numbers about 5,000. They are curious and will often look in on divers in the water and ar...
In 2017, Hurricanes Irma and Maria devastated the British Virgin Islands, including the legendary floating pirate ship bar known lovingly as the Willy-T. On August 7th, 2019 the Willy-T was purposely sunk off Peter Island. The Beyond the Reef organization created this underwater art reef to include 3 airplanes and other derelict materials currently lying abandoned thr...
The shipwreck of the Olympia (previously called 'Inland') is located near Kalotaritissa Beach on Amorgos island. It wrecked in February 1980. It is The shipwreck seen in the movie "Le Grand Bleu"/ "The Big Blue".
The 605-ton barque-rigged iron screw steamer was built at Newcastle, England in 1858. Part of its cargo on its maiden voyage to Australia were the materials and equipment for laying the Bass Strait submarine cable. After many years carrying passengers and cargo between Melbourne and Adelaide and then New Zealand Omeo was sent to Port Darwin in 1870 on charter to the c...