|
WWII GERMAN U-BOAT DISCOVERED
_at_fishers_factory,_bottom_inset;_german_type_ix_u-boat_similar_to_u-513,_top_inset;_u-boat_captain_friedrich_guggenberger__024629.jpg)
Main
photo: Wilhelm Schurmann (l) at
Fishers factory with sonar tech
Brian Awalt and side scan sonar.
Bottom inset: German Type IX
U-Boat similar to the discovered
U-513, Top inset: U-Boat Captain
Friedrich Guggenberger.
The remains of the German submarine U-513 were recently discovered off the coast
of
Brazil.
The sub was sunk by bombs dropped from an American plane in July 1943. Only 7 of
the 53 men on board survived the attack.
One survivor reported, €œsuddenly the bombs began to fall, one fell off the
starboard side, and 3 fell right in front, then exploded...€.
Although
Brazil
had been technically neutral at the beginning of the war, it allowed the
US
to establish air bases from which it could launch attacks on submarines that
were becoming a serious threat to allied shipping. As a result, Brazilian ships
became a prime target for the U-boats. During the first half of
1942, German subs sank 13 Brazilian merchant vessels.
In August, the U-507 sank 5 Brazilian ships in 2 days killing more that 600
people. In all, 21 German and two Italian submarines were responsible for the
sinking of 36 Brazilian merchant ships, causing 1,691
drownings
and 1,079 other casualties. The
sinkings
were a major reason the Brazilian government ultimately declared war against the
Axis.
Researchers from Kat
Schurmann Institute and Vale do
Itajai
University located the U-513 almost
68 years to the day after it
sank. Using a combination of
high tech equipment the 252 foot
long submarine was discovered
lying at a depth of 245 feet, 75
miles off the Brazilian state of
Santa
Catarina.
Members of the Schurmann family,
founders of the Kat Schurmann
Institute,
were actively involved in the
search.
The family had procured a JW
Fishers side scan system shortly
after opening the institute, an
organization that was devoted to
fostering sustainability and
preservation of the oceans and
coastal habitats. The primary
use for the sonar was to map the
reef structures off the
Brazilian coast. The hunt for
the submarine started out as a
hobby for family
patriach
Wilfredo
when he was told the story of
the sub€™s demise by a fellow
mariner while sailing the
Caribbean.
Over the next eight years he
spent many hours gathering
information. He studied official
accounts of the sinking, read
survivors
stories, talked to submarine
officers in the Brazilian Navy,
and even acquired a book titled
€œThe U-Boat Commanders
Handbook€.
But one of the most useful
sources of information proved to
be local fisherman.
They told him about the €œrippers€,
obstructions on the ocean floor
that would grab fishing nets and
tear them up.
Wilfredo
was provided with the
coordinates of some of these
rippers.
Combining pieces of information
gleaned from historical accounts
along with the position
coordinates, the researchers
were able to determine the most
probable locations that would
hold their prize.
At every opportunity a group
from the institute, including
Schurmann€™s
sons, would take the side scan
out and survey the underwater
obstructions.
The youngest son, Wilhelm,
had
attended a training course at
Fishers factory in
Massachusetts and was well versed
on the operation of the side
scan and use of the SONAR VIEW
software.
On July 14, 2011 their hard work paid off and the side scan
produced
definative
images of the remains of a
pressure hull on the ocean
bottom.
The final resting place of the
U-513 was had been uncovered.
Interestingly, the submarine was captained by
Friedrich
Guggenberger,
who was one of the seven survivors of the sinking.
The captain had gained notoriety in the submarine corps while commanding another
U-boat in 1941. He torpedoed the aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal, which despite
the British Navy€™s efforts to tow it to port, sank the next day.
After the war, the German Navy was reestablished and
Guggenberger
joined the service again. In the 1950s he
travelled
to US and studied at the
Newport
War
College in
Rhode Island.
He eventually rose to the rank of admiral in the German Federal Navy and went on
to become Deputy Chief of Staff in the NATO command
Allied
Forces Northern
Europe.
For more information on the side scan sonar or any of Fishers underwater search
systems go to
www.jwfishers.com.
For more information on the Schurmann family or Kat Schurmann Institute go to
www.schurmann.com.br.
For more information on Vale do Itajai University go to www.univali.br.
|
|