The Denver Post

UNDERWATER EXPEDITION REVEALS SUNKEN WARSHIP

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An underwater expedition along the California coast has revealed for the first time a sunken World War II-era aircraft carrier once used in atomic tests in the Pacific.

The expedition led by famed oceanograp­her Robert Ballard captured on Tuesday the wreckage of the USS Independen­ce, half a mile under the sea in the Greater Farallones National Marine Sanctuary.

Scientists aboard the ocean research ship Nautilus lowered two unmanned submersibl­es to the ocean floor to find a Hellcat fighter plane, anti-aircraft guns, hatches and the ship’s name on the hull.

“What’s so wonderful about the wrecks in deeper water, like this ship, the Titanic and the Bismarck, is that they are in amazing states of preservati­on,” Ballard said. “There’s very little change from when the Navy scuttled it” in 1951.

“The deep sea is the largest museum on Earth.”

Samples of marine life growing on the ship will be brought onboard to be tested for possible radioactiv­ity remaining from the bomb tests, as well as to be analyzed for the effects of climate change. The Associated Press

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