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A historical horror series has been hailed as a compelling binge-watch that 'draws you in, episode after episode' is ...
Archaeologist Marc-André Bernier carefully excavates a seamen’s chest in the forecastle (crew living quarters) on the lower deck of HMS Erebus in 2023. Brett Seymour, Parks Canada ...
Treasury Yields Spike. Inside the Selloff That’s Spooking Markets. A Classic MG Won His Heart in 1955 and Never Let Go ...
The expedition's two ships, HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, departed England in May 1845 but never reached the Pacific Ocean via the Arctic. The ships were stranded in the Victoria Strait's ice in ...
As previously reported, Franklin's two ships, the HMS Erebus and the HMS Terror, became icebound in the Victoria Strait, and all 129 crew members ultimately died.
This oil painting by the Belgian marine artist François Etienne Musin (1820–1888) refers to HMS ‘Erebus’s’ Arctic venture under the command of Sir John Franklin in 1845.
On May 19, 1845, two ships set sail from Kent, England. The crew and officers of the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, under the command of Sir John Franklin, were to carry out a mapping mission of the ...
Parks Canada research assistant Jonathan Puqiqnak at the artifact washing station on the barge Qiniqtirjuaq, cleaning an officer’s cabin corner shelf recovered from HMS Erebus in September 2022.
Filippo Ronca, an underwater archaeologist and dive safety officer who worked on HMS Erebus and Terror, has won his job back thanks to a labour board decision that reveals deep divisions and ...
Underwater archaeology technician Todd Stakenvicius returns to a support barge after a dive on HMS Erebus, with the RV David Thompson in the background, 6 September, 2023.Brett Seymour/Parks Canada ...
What happened to HMS Erebus and HMS Terror? Franklin’s lost expedition, as it’s known, was waved off from the Kent coast in 1845 with the 59-year-old British Royal Navy officer and Arctic explorer ...