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Visitors at the New York State Museum are encouraged to ask questions of staff as they reassemble the historic vessel.
Centuries-old shipwrecks off the coast of Costa Rica, long thought to have been the property of pirates, are actually Danish ...
Archaeologists are shedding light on the astonishing identification of two 18th-century slave ships off the coast of Central ...
The two vessels had been trafficking hundreds of enslaved Africans when a navigational error led them astray. They sank off ...
Archaeologists recently made a startling discovery: They found that two 18th-century shipwrecks off the coast of Central America were actually two Danish slave ships. The ships, named Fridericus ...
Denmark's National Museum said two 18th-century shipwrecks off the coast of Costa Rica were previously thought to have been pirate ships.
There are several classes of Coast Guard ships that are called cutters. Learn where the name came from and why it's used so ...
The ships were found in the early 1800s, but scientists have only recently pieced together their history. Researchers have ...
Marine archeaologists found the wood from the ships were charred and burnt ... The bricks were dated to the 18th century. Among the wreckage, the divers also found Dutch-produced pipes with ...
The ships’ identities were only called into ... both of which had large brick-making industries in the 18th century. The clay pipes were also revealed to be Danish, with their size, shape ...
Archaeologists are shedding light on the astonishing identification of two 18th-century slave ships off the coast of Central America. The ships, named Fridericus Quartus and Christianus Quintus ...