Shipwreck bellow the sand

cornelis 816

Sr. Member
Sep 3, 2010
466
47
Charlie . It has a lot to do with the condition of the sea floor and the current . So there is no set parimeter of the position of the wreck . Sorry ! Cornelius
 

stevemc

Bronze Member
Feb 12, 2005
2,121
279
Sarasota, FL
Detector(s) used
Whites Surfmaster PI Pro and Whites Surfmaster PI, Minelab Excal NY blue sword. 2 White's Dual field pi, Garrett sea hunter pi II (but don't use it for obvious reasons) 5' x 3 1/2' coil underwater Pi
Primary Interest:
Shipwrecks
What Cornelis said is exactly true. There is no set amount of sand. some are above the sand, some have justa dusting of sand, some a few feet of sand, and some have many feet of sand. It doesnt have any normal amount. some are buried under 20 feet of sand.
 

ivan salis

Gold Member
Feb 5, 2007
16,794
3,810
callahan,fl
🏆 Honorable Mentions:
1
Detector(s) used
delta 4000 / ace 250 - used BH and many others too
how deep a shipwreck is covered over by sand and such varies greatly mainly due to the shipwrecks location and the "local" conditions at the location * --many shipwrecks are in generally shallow waters * due to the fact that normally a ship has to strike something with her hull to sink ( hitting a shallow reef or bottom bouncing in shallow water until her hull gives way -due to being pushed inward towards shore by a storm) which causes her to break up and "sink" -- % wize very few vessels just "fell apart" in deep waters iin a storm ** unless they were damaged by a attack or were basically totally "unsea worthy"*** beforehand but used anyway. -- *** note*** most sailors would not "knowingly" sail on such a death trap vessel .

and some wrecks can be sitting nice and pretty on the sea floor easy to see --but be buried under miles of "red tape". >:( thus their "untouchible"
 

piratediver

Sr. Member
Jun 29, 2006
264
6
newport, Rhode Island
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
The sand depth not only varies from wreck to wreck it often changes on the same site. On the WHYDAH we have seen sand depths from 5-20 feet and also indications that winter storms have uncovered large sections of the site for short periods of time.
The sand on Cape Cod is constantly moving and the huge dunes are in a state of perpetual erosion, much of that sand gets deposited over the hundreds of wrecks in the area.


Pirate Diver
 

capt dom

Hero Member
Nov 9, 2006
995
282
Jupiter, Florida USA
It also {the sand depth over one's historic shipwreck site} may well be determined
by just how much money the local community may have to bury your site!

Luckily for us most of this material merrily transits on its journey to the south
helping the folks at Seminole and Lost Tree Village along with another
newly transplanted swedish "Treasure"
Elan - keep their unspoiled beach front mansions....
 

Attachments

  • mar 22 10am.jpg
    mar 22 10am.jpg
    74.6 KB · Views: 548

wwwtimmcp

Bronze Member
Sep 22, 2007
1,666
55
wakeman, ohio
Detector(s) used
J.W.FISHERS pulse 8x
Primary Interest:
Shipwrecks
a good quality side scan sonar should be able to tell you, these can do sub bottom profiling and see beneath sand or mud.
 

FISHEYE

Bronze Member
Feb 27, 2004
2,333
401
lake mary florida
Detector(s) used
Chasing Dory ROV,Swellpro Splash 2 pro waterproof drone,Swellpro Spry+ wa,Wesmar SHD700SS Side Scan Sonar,U/W Mac 1 Turbo Aquasound by American Electronics,Fisher 1280x,Aquasound UW md,Aqua pulse AQ1B
Primary Interest:
All Treasure Hunting
The shipwreck site for the El salvador in NC.The ship wrecked on a sandbar which is like quick sand and sank deep into the sand.We blew a hole 100 foot in diameter and 30 foot down and just hit wood.The ballast and cannon are further down and the gold maybe under the ballast by now.There is no real hard pan up there so whatever is heavy will keep on going down in time.
 

OP
OP
C

charlie23

Greenie
Jan 8, 2011
19
0
Thanks for all the answers!

I´m after a ship which got beated after a battle, and dragged into the beach, till hit the surface, which was at 12-13 feet, and I expect it to be there. I guess that when a ship finally wreacks close to the beach, it´ll get buried easier that one lost on open sea....

Well thank you all ;)
 

bronzecannons

Full Member
Sep 1, 2005
202
87
Oceanside, CA
Primary Interest:
Shipwrecks
wwwtimmcp said:
a good quality side scan sonar should be able to tell you, these can do sub bottom profiling and see beneath sand or mud.

Side Scan Sonars are pretty high frequencies (100 to 950 Khz) so do not penetrate the sea bed. Only sub-bottom profilers are used for searching for objects buried below the sea bed.
TW
 

Top Member Reactions

Users who are viewing this thread

Top