Wreck of Soviet WWII sub found

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  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    Wreck of Soviet WWII sub found

    http://www.winnipegsun.com/news/world/2 ... 38966.html
    includes one photo

    Wreck of Soviet WWII sub found

    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Last Updated: 9th June 2009, 11:46am

    STOCKHOLM — A group of Baltic Sea divers say they have found the wreck of a Soviet submarine that sank with a crew of 50 during the Second World War.

    One of the divers, Marten Zetterstrom, says the S-class submarine was located near the Aland Islands between Sweden and Finland.

    Zetterstrom says all crew members died when the vessel exploded in 1940, probably after hitting a mine.

    Markus Lindholm, an Aland-based maritime archaeology expert who studied pictures of the wreck, says the claim appears to be true. He says only one submarine was known to have sunk in the area.

    Zetterstrom says divers found the wreck in February after a decade-long search but only announced it Tuesday because they wanted to confirm the identity of the submarine.
  • u-5075
    Junior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 1134

    #2
    Photos

    http://www.csmonitor.com/photosoftheday ... 2009/0609/

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/art

    Photos

    http://www.csmonitor.com/photosoftheday ... 2009/0609/

    http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/art ... AD98NA3V80

    Russian explorers are going to ask Russia's government to assist them in their search for a Soviet submarine near the Bulgarian Black Sea coast. The search will be conducted in July 2009 as part of the Russia-Bulgaria submarine expedition "In Honor of the Great Victory's Ships" dedicated to the 65th anniversary of the Soviet victory in World War II.

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    • u-5075
      Junior Member
      • Feb 2003
      • 1134

      #3
      A few more photos and

      A few more photos and much more historical info

      http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Divers ... 5246670472

      3 photos

      HELSINGIN SANOMAT
      INTERNATIONAL EDITION - HOME

      Divers find Soviet submarine sunk in Ã…land Sea in 1940
      Ten-year search proves successful





      On January 3rd, 1940, during the Winter War, J.A. Eckerman, the guard of the Märket lighthouse in the Åland Sea between the Åland Islands and the Swedish coast, was making observations.
      Eckerman caught sight of a submarine off the eastern peninsula of Märket. On its tower he could see the inscription “C-2", which suggested that it was a Soviet vessel. In the Cyrillic alphabet the letter C is pronounced “S”.
      The submarine appeared to be moving in a northerly direction. Then it suddenly turned east, and then north again.

      When the submarine disappeared from view, an explosion was heard. Eckerman turned his telescope toward the sound of the explosion and saw black smoke rising, which was blown away by the wind.
      Eckerman wondered what might have caused the explosion. He felt that the submarine could not have reached the position where the explosion took place.
      Five days later the Finnish Defence Forces questioned Eckerman about the matter. The report ended up in Finland’s War Archives, and the fate of the submarine remained unknown, as if it had vanished without a trace.

      Decades later a group of Swedish divers and one diver from the Ã…land Islands decided to find out if there really was a Soviet S-2 submarine lying at the bottom of the Ã…land Sea. The Ã…land native in the group is Ingvald Eckerman, the grandson of lighthouse keeper J.A. Eckerman, who was the last to see the submarine.
      The group started surveying the sea bottom in April 1999. The search lasted ten years, and on Tuesday this week the divers announced that they had found the wreck of the S-2.

      Finding the sunken submarine was not easy. The search area was broad and the sea bottom is uneven. Also, the weather in the area is often unfavourable. In addition, there were conflicting reports on the fate of the vessel.
      “According to one theory, it was only damaged, and sank later somewhere else. There is also uncertainty on whether or not it had gone down in Finnish or in Swedish waters”, says one of the members of the team, Björn Rosenlöf of Stockholm. According to Rosenlöf, the team was close to giving up five years ago when nothing was found.
      “After that we would dive in the area only when we happened to be there anyway. In 2006 the group found another Soviet submarine, an SC-306, in the Åland Sea in Swedish waters.

      The S-2 is believed to have hit a mine. Archive information on whether or not the vessel sank in Finnish or Swedish waters, and whose mine it might have hit, is contradictory.
      According to the uboat.net website, which specialises in submarines, the fateful mine had been laid by the Finnish vessel, the Louhi.
      Rosenlölf says that the S-2 had suffered serious damage. “It is in pieces. There is a rear 30 to 35 metres long, a mid-section about 20 metres in length, and the bow was completely destroyed by the explosion.
      The fact that the bow was missing suggests to Rösenlöf that the submarine ran into a mine, which also detonated the torpedoes in the bow.

      The 78-metre long vessel had a crew of 46. There were also four other passengers, including Gavril Tutyshkin, commander of the 13th submarine division of the Soviet Navy.
      In addition to Finland and Sweden, the discovery of the submarine has raised interest in Russia as well. “The grandson of the captain has been in close contact with us”, Rosenlöf says.
      But is the wreck on the Finnish or Swedish side of the sea border? “We know the answer to that, but we are not saying yet. We don’t want it to be plundered”, Rosenlöf answers.

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