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SS Armenia Eludes Search Crew

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  • SS Armenia Eludes Search Crew

    SS ARMENIA ELUDES SEARCH CREW
    By Sandra Jontz

    Stars and Stripes
    Sept 18 2008
    DC

    USNS Pathfinder probe discovers 2 other vessels

    They didn't find the SS Armenia, but U.S. and Ukrainian oceanographers
    and scientists did come across two other vessels submerged in the
    deep and murky waters of the Black Sea.

    The oceanographic survey ship USNS Pathfinder, under Military Sealift
    Command, started searching Sept. 7 for the Soviet-flagged hospital
    ship SS Armenia, sunk in 1941 by the German Luftwaffe, officials said.

    Using a remotely operated vehicle equipped with underwater video
    capabilities, teams instead managed to identify the German coastal
    submarine U-18, and the RUS Prut, a Russian minelayer sunk in 1914
    during World War I, U.S. officials said.

    At the request of Ukrainian officials, civilian surveyors from the
    U.S. Naval Oceanographic Office, Ukrainian sailors, surveyors and
    historians, and a team of civilian oceanographers from the U.S.-based
    Institute for Exploration searched waters at depths ranging from about
    300 feet to 3,300 feet for the hospital ship, sunk during World War
    II with 7,000 people on board.

    "The sea floor is a resting place for brave sailors, regardless of the
    country they come from," Serge Gulyar, head of Underwater Physiology
    Department at the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine, said in
    a statement released by the U.S. Navy.

    But the high-tech, 328.5-foot-long Pathfinder had only three weeks to
    conduct the search, and has ended the quest because of rules spelled
    out in the Montreux Convention, a treaty that restricts the time
    vessels foreign to the nations that rim the Black Seat can spend there.

    "I am happy with the amount of work that we were able to accomplish
    during this survey," IFE chief scientist Katy Croff said in a
    statement. "During this exploration we discovered many sonar targets
    that we hope to investigate and identify during future projects."

    The ship finished its mission Tuesday.
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