The Fame was a Dutch merchant ship that wrecked in 1631. Parts of the ship resurfaced in 2013, but the hull had been missing for nearly four centuries.
In 1631, a Dutch merchant ship ran aground and sank on an infamous sandbank when entering the Swash Channel. Now, more than 400 years later, researchers believe they've finally found the hull of the ...
Marconi Beach and historic area in South Wellfleet is popular with visitors, but the eroding Atlantic Ocean bluff makes beach ...
This is the crazy story of the 1970 Exploding Whale Incident in Florence, Oregon. VOTE: Do you support US special forces on ...
As the calendar slips from February to March, a true celebration of “‘Black & White’ American History” is experienced during these months here: a summary from my book Volume II: […] ...
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Why a Venezuelan beach is a snorkeler’s time capsule
Just off Venezuela’s Caribbean coast, Isla Larga catches your eye with postcard‑clear water, soft white sand, and that kind ...
As beach days return to the Lowcountry, a delicate balancing act is underway on the Isle of Palms, where efforts to combat coastal erosion must contend with Civil War history resting just offshore.
A man from Hastings in East Sussex was “surprised” to find The Amsterdam famous shipwreck revealed by a low tide in St Leonards on the beach ...
Experts think the newly unearthed timbers may have come from the "Fame From Hoorn," an armed Dutch merchant vessel that sank ...
USS H-3 being moved off Samoa Beach to Humboldt Bay on April 6, 1917, during salvage operations by the Mercer-Fraser Company. Public domain.
Recent winter storms along England's southwestern coast have uncovered the preserved remains of a 17th-century ship at Studland Beach in Dorset, according to archaeologists.
The remains of a 17th-century ship recently resurfaced after winter storms ripped open a beach in the United Kingdom.
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