A team of Norwegians has recovered the wreckage of a ship that once belonged to famed Arctic explorer Roald Amundsen and that sank off the coast of Nunavut more than eight decades ago. The Maud was lifted from shallow waters in Cambridge Bay at around 3 p.m. MT Saturday. The team had been attempting to recover the wreckage for six years.
Amundsen’s ship plied the Arctic between 1918 and 1920 in a failed attempt to cross the North Pole. After he went bankrupt, the ship was sold to the Hudson Bay Company, which used it as a floating warehouse. It sank off what is now Cambridge Bay in 1930 and has been there ever since.
The team plans to lift the ship completely out of the water and tug her back to Norway; making her float again, while the hull is still below the surface, was the first step.
Jan Wanggaard, project manager for the Norway-based organization Maud Returns Home says for the past month, the team has been slowly inflating what he calls air bags or balloons to help her rise to the surface, unsure of when that would be exactly.
Wanggaard was in the water inflating one of the balloons when it happened. “I saw it was more dusty in the water than normal… and I thought, ‘Ah, that’s a bit strange,'” Wanggaard said. “And then I came up to the surface and I saw my friend with a big smile.”
Within the next few weeks, Wanggaard and his team will work on lifting the ship completely out of the water, using a barge they tugged across the Atlantic from Norway.
Wanggaard says they’ll submerge the barge, float Maud over it and slowly bring the barge back up to the surface, carrying the ship.
It will still be years before the Norwegian team can bring the ship back to Norway, but Wanggaard has already looked at two possible routes home: either through the Northwest Passage and Greenland, or “going over Russia because that’s where the Maud came from originally.”
Wanggaard hesitates to put a date on Maud’s arrival in Norway, but said it would be great if it coincided with some significant anniversaries like 2017, 100 years since she was launched, or December 2018, 100 years since she sailed from Norway.
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Source: CBC