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Violet Fashion by Mindy
06-01-2007, 07:26 PM
Claims sunken WWII RAN ship finally found

By Vincent Morelli
May 29, 2007 08:11pm

Article from: AAP
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A BRITISH maritime researcher claims to have solved one of Australia's greatest wartime mysteries by locating the wreck of HMAS Sydney.
Timothy Akers also says he has discovered the whereabouts of the German raider Kormoran that sank the Sydney off the coast of Western Australia in November 1941, killing all 645 men on board.
And the wrecks of a number of Japanese warships and submarines, also believed to have been involved in the battle, are lying on the ocean floor nearby, Mr Akers claims.
However, Mr Akers' claims have been rejected by his former employer – now competitor – and prompted a plea from the Australian Government to reveal the whereabouts of the wrecks.
The Bulletin magazine reported that Mr Akers previously worked for the renowned shipwreck hunter David Mearns, who sacked him in 1998.

In 2005, the Australian Government offered a $1.3 million grant to the Perth-based company HMAS Sydney Search, which contracted Mr Mearns' services, to locate the wreck.
But the conditional grant fell short of the $4 million HMAS Sydney Search said the project required.
Several British experts have supported Mr Akers' findings, but Australian officials want proof.
Mr Akers has refused to divulge all of the details of the technique he used to locate the sunken vessels, which incorporate satellite images and radiation readings to detect images underwater.
He claims to have located the vessels in the Indian Ocean off Shark Bay and Carnarvon – an area also favoured by Mr Mearns.
However, Mr Mearns has rejected Mr Akers' claimed discovery as "total bullsh*t", The Bulletin reported.

Mr Mearns said the designated search area takes in 1600 square nautical miles of depths between 2300m and 4300m.
Mr Akers has offered to tell the Federal Government the location of the wreck if a formal request is made and providing "this wreck is not robbed".
"I have also found a number of Japanese vessels – two submarines and possibly a Japanese aircraft carrier in the general vicinity of HMAS Sydney," Mr Akers said.

"The Kormoran and another Japanese submarine is further north."
Mr Mearns said the idea of a submarine being involved "is nonsense".
Although all died on board the Sydney, 317 of the 397 men from the Kormoran survived.




http://www.news.com.au/story/0,23599,21816706-2,00.html

Dr_ColoSSus
06-03-2007, 07:04 AM
Mr Mearns said the idea of a submarine being involved "is nonsense".


I would not rule anything out until the wreck is actually found and examined. Anything is possible, as the last sighting of the Sydney by survivors from the Kormoran, saw the cruiser, burning but still sailing off into the distance.

lastdingo
06-03-2007, 07:51 PM
Question; I've seen some old documentary on the Bismarck wreck on TV. Has anyone ever found and photographed the HMS Hood?

baboon6
06-04-2007, 04:49 AM
Question; I've seen some old documentary on the Bismarck wreck on TV. Has anyone ever found and photographed the HMS Hood?

Yes Hood was located several years ago (2003 I think), photographed and filmed. She is not nearly as intact as Bismarck.There have been several documentaries on Discovery and National Geographic. A memorial plaque was laid on the wreck by the last survivor, Ted Briggs (he pressed the button to make the Remote Operated Vehicle put down the plaque).

SturmPionier
06-04-2007, 07:07 AM
POWs from the "Kormoran"

http://www.wlb-stuttgart.de/seekrieg/4111-bilder/pow-kormoran.jpg

The Kormoran

http://www.lexikon-der-wehrmacht.de/Bilder/Hilfskreuzer/Kormoran-3.jpg

curlyboy
06-04-2007, 04:55 PM
The Sydney vanished i remember watching a programme about this a while ago and no one knew what happened until about 2 years later a dyngy washed up marked HMAS Sydney with some skeletons or remains on board.

The Japanese Sub would be a new twist as historians could never explain how a merchant raider sank a Light Cruiser.

curlyboy

Dr_ColoSSus
06-12-2007, 01:19 AM
The Sunday times printed an article a few years ago which featured an interview with of an officer from the Kormoran. He said that it got real close before revealing its true colours, and opened up on the Sydney with everything it had (including Torpedos). The Sydney was heavily damaged but returned fire, sinking the Kormoran. Afterwards he said the burning Sydney just sailed away. That was the ast time she was seen. There has been a lot of speculation as to what happened and it would be interesting to know the truth. If the wreck is ever found that is.