For the third year of a three year program, Parks Canada archaeologists have failed in their attempt at finding the wrecks of the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror. This year they searched an area west of King William Island, where Sir John Franklin and his expedition became stranded in ice.
Franklin ships remain unfound
Archeologists in the Arctic hoping to find Sir John Franklin’s long-lost ships neared the end of their latest search Friday with no shipwreck in sight. It appears HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, two of the most sought-after wrecks in Canada, will remain undiscovered for now.
Erebus and Terror vanished in the High Arctic more than 160 years ago, along with the famous British explorer and 128 crew.
This was the third year of a three-year-program to find Erebus and Terror, but searches for the two ships and remnants of Franklin’s failed 1845 expedition began almost immediately after he disappeared. Marc-Andre Bernier, Parks Canada’s chief of underwater archeology, says it is too soon to say whether the search program might be extended beyond this year.
Crews in two boats have been using sonar to map the ocean floor, he said. But a plan to use a new underwater robotic vehicle fell apart.
“We weren’t able to deploy it,” he said. “We’re hoping if we continue next year, that’s going to be available, but unfortunately for this year, we ran into some technical problems at the last minute, so that actually could not be used on this survey”
Even if Erebus and Terror remain lost, Bernier said, the expedition, run from the coast guard icebreaker Sir Wilfrid Laurier, has been useful for mapping the area.