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Innes McCartney 《International Journal of Nautical Archaeology》2012,41(1):56-66
This paper presents the findings from a survey of one of the shipwrecks of the Battle of Jutland, and is extracted from a longer currently unpublished report which examines the six known Royal Navy wrecks. While all of the wrecks yielded unique insights into the battle, Defence was a particularly surprising case. The extant remains of this wreck showed for the first time how the ship was destroyed and explains what some eyewitnesses reported at the time. Intact and unsalvaged, it is a source of much valuable archaeological and historical data. © 2012 The Author 相似文献
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The Opening and Closing Sequences of the Battle of Jutland 1916 Re‐examined: archaeological investigations of the wrecks of HMS Indefatigable and SMS V4 下载免费PDF全文
Innes McCartney 《International Journal of Nautical Archaeology》2017,46(2):317-329
This paper presents the findings from surveys carried out in March 2016 of two wrecks sunk during the Battle of Jutland. The remains of HMS Indefatigable had previously only been partially understood. SMS V4, was found and surveyed for the first time. They represent the first and last ships sunk and allow the timings of the opening and closing of the battle to be established. In the case of HMS Indefatigable, the discovery that the ship broke in two, seemingly unnoticed, substantially revises the narrative of the opening minutes of the battle. 相似文献
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HMS Hampshire: a century of myths and mysteries unravelled JAMES IRVINE,BRIAN BUDGE,JUDE CALLISTER,KEVIN HEATH,ANDREW HOLLINRAKE,ISSY GRIEVE,KEITH JOHNSON,NEIL KERMODE,MICHAEL LOWREY,TOM MUIR,EMILY TURTON and BEN WADE 120pp., over 100 b&w illustrations,Orkney Heritage Society, 2016, £25 + p&p,ISBN 978‐0953594573 下载免费PDF全文
Innes McCartney 《International Journal of Nautical Archaeology》2017,46(1):224-225
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Scuttled in the Morning: the discoveries and surveys of HMS Warrior and HMS Sparrowhawk,the Battle of Jutland's last missing shipwrecks 下载免费PDF全文
Innes McCartney 《International Journal of Nautical Archaeology》2018,47(2):253-266
Due to the circumstances of the loss of HMS Warrior and HMS Sparrowhawk in 1916, in which subsequent to disablement both had drifted and been towed unknown distances from the Jutland battlefield, they were not located in the 2015 Jutland survey. In August 2016 both ships were located and HMS Warrior was revealed to be a pristine warship wreck, the only example in this condition of the 25 ships sunk in the battle. HMS Sparrowhawk had a similar pattern of disturbance as seven of the other Battle of Jutland destroyer wrecks. The survey of these wrecks draws to a conclusion a long period of discovery at Jutland and raises questions as to how these important cultural artefacts should be treated in the future. 相似文献