The Columbus Dispatch

Australia finds lost WWI submarine

- By Palko Karasz

LONDON — For more than a century, the fate of Australia’s first military submarine was one of the country’s enduring maritime mysteries.

The vessel, lost off Papua New Guinea in September 1914, barely seven months after being commission­ed for service, disappeare­d with 35 crew members during operations to capture the German Pacific colonies in World War I. Now the puzzle is solved. The Australian navy announced Thursday the discovery of a wreck they identified as the submarine, the AE1. The discovery was made by a survey ship, the Fugro Equator, that was used in another seemingly impossible endeavor: the search for the remains of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, which disappeare­d during a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing on March 8, 2014.

The submarine was found south of the Duke of York Islands at a depth of about 1,000 feet.

Images captured during the expedition suggested the submarine is well preserved and still in one piece.

Nobody knows what caused the AE1 to sink in 1914 — it had not been under attack — though theories include an explosion of one of its torpedoes or a failure of a high-pressure air cylinder.

The AE1 and its sister vessel, the AE2, arrived in Australia in the spring of 1914, crossing half the globe after their constructi­on in England. They soon joined the war, but neither lasted long. After the AE1 vanished, the AE2 was reported to have been sunk by Turkish warships near the Sea of Marmara in 1915, during the Gallipoli campaign. The AE2 was discovered in 1998, about 240 feet down.

 ?? [AUSTRALIAN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE] ?? The Australian submarine AE1, found about 1,000 feet down off the coast of the Papua New Guinea island of New Britain, appears to be in one piece.
[AUSTRALIAN DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE] The Australian submarine AE1, found about 1,000 feet down off the coast of the Papua New Guinea island of New Britain, appears to be in one piece.

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