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Famous Shipwrecks Located After Discovering the Titanic

Famous Shipwrecks Located After Discovering the Titanic

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

1985: Ships from Spanish Armada

Hulton Archive / Getty Images

1985: Nuestra Señora de Atocha

By Paul Hermans - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14685417

1988: SS Central America

Spencer Platt / Getty Images News via Getty Images

1991: Stella

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

1995: La Belle

By Cmeide - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4414231

1996: Queen Anne’s Revenge

By Qualiesin - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=86963521

1998: Batu Hitam

By Unknown author. - Photographed by Jacklee on 19 March 2011, 21:03., CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=14637341

1998: Esmeralda

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

1999: RMS Carpathia

library_of_congress / Flickr

2006: Graf Zeppelin

national_museum_of_the_us_navy / Flickr

2007: Korean 12th-century shipwreck

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2007: Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2009: AHS Centaur

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2009: HMS Victory

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2011: Roman transport ship

Martin Bahmann / Wikimedia Commons

2014: HMS Erebus

Illustrated London News / Hulton Archive via Getty Images

2016: HMS Terror

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2018: Black Sea shipwreck

By Oleksandr (Alex) Zakletsky - Own work, CC BY 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=97089776

2018: USS Juneau

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2018: USS Lexington

Pictorial Parade / Archive Photos via Getty Images

2019: USS Hornet

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2019: USS Wasp

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2019: Hiei

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2020: SS Pere Marquette 18

Public Domain / Wikimedia Commons

2021: Frank W. Wheeler

Courtesy of The Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society

1985: Ships from Spanish Armada
1985: Nuestra Señora de Atocha
1988: SS Central America
1991: Stella
1994: Ships from the fleet of Kublai Khan
1995: La Belle
1996: Queen Anne’s Revenge
1998: Batu Hitam
1998: Esmeralda
1999: RMS Carpathia
2006: Graf Zeppelin
2007: Korean 12th-century shipwreck
2007: Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes
2008: Two Brothers
2009: AHS Centaur
2009: HMS Victory
2011: Roman transport ship
2014: HMS Erebus
2016: HMS Terror
2018: Black Sea shipwreck
2018: USS Juneau
2018: USS Lexington
2019: USS Hornet
2019: USS Wasp
2019: Hiei
2020: SS Pere Marquette 18
2021: Frank W. Wheeler
2022: Endurance

It often seems that people have been fascinated with shipwrecks for quite some time. Since the time of the Greek poet Homer in 675BCE, shipwrecks have played an integral part in literature, featuring prominently in great works, from “The Odyssey” by Homer, to “Twelfth Night” and “The Tempest” by William Shakespeare. The most well-known shipwreck in history, the RMS Titanic, which went down in the North Atlantic Ocean in April 1912, has always captured the attention of people throughout the world.

Although explorers such as Jacques Cousteau have long stirred imaginations with underwater probes of doomed vessels, it was the discovery of the RMS Titanic in 1985, 73 years after its sinking, by professor of oceanography and maritime archeologist Robert Ballard that caused interest in shipwrecks to soar. Since then, there’s been an explosion of shipwreck finds around the world. (These are 57 fascinating facts about the Titanic.)

Finding a shipwreck has been the stuff of fantasy for as long as people have sought opportunities beyond the horizon. There are many sites worldwide that have wrecked vessels to discover, where divers can explore remains of sunken history; it’s estimated that there are more than three million undiscovered shipwrecks around the world.

24/7 Tempo gleaned information from sources such as Guernsey Museums, Naval History and Heritage Command Marine Insight, UNESCO, History, and Archaeology Mysteries, as well as various media websites to compile a list of shipwrecks located after discovering the Titanic.

David Mearns, who discovered a few of the notable shipwrecks on this list, told History that there are several reasons for the uptick in finding sunken vessels. Records around the world have been digitized, making them more easily accessible and explorers have better tools for searches. These include autonomous underwater vehicles, or AUVs, and remote-operated vehicles, or ROVs, which allow explorers to probe almost any ocean depth and cover a wider area than had previously been practical. (Here are the most famous shipwrecks ever found.)

Since discovering the Titanic’s final resting place, shipwreck hunters have discovered ships battered by hurricanes like the SS Central America, which contained gold from the 1849 Gold Rush; vessels from the fleets of the Spanish Armada, Vasco da Gama, LaSalle, and Kublai Khan; the world’s oldest intact boat lying off the Bulgarian coastline; and many World War II-era ships sunk in battle, some of them found by the research team of Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen.

The most recent significant discovery came in early March 2022, when researchers and maritime archeologists found the British vessel Endurance, the lost ship of Antarctic explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton, that was crushed by sea ice and sank in 1915.

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