American History
Related: About this forumHurricane Michael unearthed 19th century shipwrecks in Florida
Ships that washed ashore on Dog Island during the 1899 Carrabelle Hurricane were unearthed completely by Hurricane Michael's vicious storm surge last week in Franklin County, Florida.
Of the 15 ships that were grounded on the barrier island during the storm 119 years ago, it's unclear which or how many were unearthed by Michael.
Sitting on the Gulf of Mexico side of the island, the wooden ships now rest in plain view near the west end of the island.
They are well-documented wrecks, according to the Florida Department of State. Because state resources are being allocated to more urgent hurricane recovery efforts, there are currently no plans for state archaeologists to visit the site.
Theyve been mostly stationary since 1899 when they were wrecked in a hurricane, wrote DOS spokeswoman Sarah Revell. From time to time, some parts of the site have become exposed.
At: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2018/10/20/hurricane-michael-unearthed-ship-wrecks-dog-island-florida/1712168002/
Brought ashore by Michael, an 1899 shipwreck awaits inspection on Florida's Dog Island.
Kajun Gal
(1,907 posts)sandensea
(22,850 posts)Reminds me of those severe droughts that expose whole towns submerged under reservoir waters.
https://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2011/07/the-ruins-of-villa-epecuen/100110/
Kajun Gal
(1,907 posts)htuttle
(23,738 posts)...but are the state archeologists busy doing something else?
I mean, do they usually have a more important role after hurricanes?
Legitimately curious.
flotsam
(3,268 posts)but I'd bet that many archeologists have useful forensic skills among other reasons...
True Dough
(20,310 posts)Although seeing flotsam pop up with a comment was also apropos.
sandensea
(22,850 posts)A fine catch if I do say so myself.