Scientists Find Oldest Intact Shipwreck in Black Sea

In the dark and oxygenless waters of the Black Sea two miles below the surface, a team of maritime archaeologists, scientists and surveyors has discovered what it believes to be the world’s oldest intact shipwreck. Carbon dating suggests that the … Continue reading

Pristine Wrecks in Great Lakes, Baltic & Black Sea While Bacteria Devours the Titanic

Recently, the New York Times featured an article on 40 recently discovered wooden shipwrecks located deep in the Black Sea off the Bulgarian coast. In age, the wrecks span a millennium, from the ninth to the 19th centuries. What is … Continue reading

500 Year Old Sea Monster Figurehead from the Bottom of the Baltic Sea

Divers exploring the wreck of the Gribshunden have recovered a figurehead of a sea monster with ‘lion ears and crocodile-like mouth’ which has lay on the bottom of the Baltic Sea for roughly 500 years off the coast of Ronneby in southern Sweden. … Continue reading

Jellyfish Invasion Shuts Down Swedish Reactor – A Sign of the Jellyfish Apocalypse?

Over the weekend, a huge swarm of moon jellyfish shut down the 1,400 megawatt Unit 3 reactor at the Oskarshamn nuclear power plant on Sweden’s Baltic Sea coast.  The jellyfish clogged the cooling water intakes, located roughly 60′ feet below the … Continue reading

Shipwreck’s “World’s Oldest Beer” to be Brewed Again in Finland

The “World’s Oldest Beer” to be will soon be brewed again by an Åland brewery in Finland.  In 2010, we posted about the discovery in a shipwreck in the Baltic off Finland’s Åland archipelago which contained what was believed to be several bottles … Continue reading

Dive on Baltic Sea “Millenium Falcon” Only Deepens Mystery

Last June, while doing sonar sweeps of the bottom of the Baltic Sea, the Swedish treasure hunters, Ocean X Team, saw something that they did not understand.  It appeared to be a 197 feet diameter disk-shaped object at the depth of approximately 275 feet.   … Continue reading

Bombs in the Baltic – Two Hurt by WWII Phosphorus on German Shoreline

World War II ended in Europe on May 8, 1945. Nevertheless, over 60 years later, the threat from left over munitions continues and may be getting worse.  Last November, we posted about bombs along the Rhine, where a drought was revealing un-exploded ordinance in German river banks.  Then … Continue reading

Submarines Lost and Found, Part 4 – Russian WWI Sub Gepard May Be Found

As reported by the Stockholm News – WW1 Russian submarine found The submarine wreck was discovered by a research ship of the Swedish Maritime Administration the 10 September. A closer study with a radio-controlled underwater vessel indicate that the submarine … Continue reading