|
EXPEDITION 2008
Scroll down for photos!
During our 2008 survey, using the Navy's nuclear research submarine NR1,
we
searched 375 square miles of the North Sea. We recorded and
investigated 26 different wreck sites, some modern and some older and
unidentified. After many hours of data analysis, we have
determined that none of those wrecks are likely to be the Bonhomme
Richard. We will need to expand our search area and return again in a future
expedition to continue this great quest!
We have been privileged to
have the U.S. Navy as such a strong partner,
and would like to thank the crews of NR1 and its support ship
Carolyn Chouest for their outstanding contributions to the project.
Thank you to our individual and corporate
sponsors for
making this expedition possible!

Above: NR1 alongside its support ship, Carolyn Chouest
(below).


NR1 cruises by HMS Victory (tall ship in the background)
at the Portsmouth Navy Yard, Portsmouth, U.K. HMS Victory
is of similar historic significance and of the same time period as
Bonhomme Richard.

Expedition Team Members: Kevin Ridarelli (Archeology
Intern, University of Connecticut), Melissa Ryan (Project Manager,
Ocean Technology Foundation), George Schwarz (Archeologist, Naval
Historical Center). Not pictured: Peter Reaveley,
Historical Researcher.

The conning station of NR1.

The grand galley of NR1.
Note the tiny oven just above the corn dogs and tater tots.
Twenty minutes at 400 degrees cooks just about anything in the
freezer (below)!


With 13 people on board and 4
bunks, some crew members had to sleep in the passageway
and in the hanging rack above.
Here are some of the wrecks
we investigated. It's very challenging with poor visibility,
and trying to maneuver a 150-foot submarine in powerful currents,
but the NR-1 crew did a tremendous job and gave 110% to the effort.

A mass of tangled fishing
nets makes this wreck difficult to see.

The ship's frames are clearly
visible in this wreck.

White coral is often found
covering wrecks in the North Sea.

Frames and hatchways are
still intact here.

The modern-looking bow of
another wreck.

A mess of frames and other
unidentifiable materials (but the best visibility we had!)
Return to Bonhomme Richard Homepage |