CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

Funding gives group 'better chance' to find Franklin's ships: lead searcher

Last Updated: Monday, August 18, 2008 | 4:08 PM ET

As the latest attempt by Canada to find the lost ships of Sir John Franklin began Monday in the Arctic, the archeologist leading the six-week mission says it will be worth the government's money.

The federal government has contributed $75,000 to the latest search by Parks Canada for Franklin's ships, HMS Terror and HMS Erebus, which have been missing since Franklin set sail from England in 1845, bound for the Northwest Passage.

The funding, announced Friday by Environment Minister John Baird, sparked criticism from some who said the the expedition is a waste of taxpayers' dollars.

But Robert Grenier, the Parks Canada senior underwater archeologist leading the six-week expedition, said he is confident his team will find artifacts from Franklin's doomed ships — artifacts, he said, that play a major role in charting Canada's history.

"We feel that we have [a] better chance, but that's as far as we can go," Grenier told CBC News Monday morning from Gjoa Haven, Nunavut.

"I found that these vessels were instrumental in a major way in getting Canada to be as large as it is today. Their demise, their mysterious disappearance, led to the longest and largest search and rescue operation at sea."

Grenier and his team will spend the next six weeks aboard the Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker Sir Wilfrid Laurier. He said an arrangement between his team and the coast guard is making the trip cost-effective.

"We got an agreement with the Canadian Coast Guard and Hydrographic Service of Canada, which allowed us to use the icebreaker as a floating station [at] a very, very, very low cost," he said.

"We pay on the icebreaker $75 a day, room and board and that's normal for these vessels of opportunity. So the six weeks on the icebreaker will cost altogether $75,000."

If the current expedition fails, two more six-week trips are scheduled to take place over the next two summers.

But Grenier said that he is confident some Franklin artifacts will be found, thanks to newer equipment they didn't have before.

His team is also relying on Inuit oral histories from the area, many of which are collected by Gjoa Haven historian Louis Kamookak.

"In the case of the Inuit, the oral tradition is quite valuable," Grenier said. "Not much was happening here; these were the first large ships of white men coming this way."

Grenier's previous trips to find the lost vessels include trips in 1983 and 1997. In the latter expedition, scientists found sheets of copper that correspond to the right time period when Franklin and his crews set sail towards the passage.

Grenier added that the copper sheets "correspond to the Inuit traditions telling us about one ship ending in that vicinity, being discovered by Inuit hunters in the spring, floating on fresh ice."

"The chance over three seasons are pretty good, but that's as far as I can go," he said. "It's still a big ocean, and I know in marine archeology there are some strange things happening. So we will see, but I am quite confident that we will make something."

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 
 

Related

Audio

Randy Henderson of the CBC Radio program The Trailbreaker speaks with Robert Grenier about his search (Runs: 9:41)
Play: Real Media »

Technology & Science Headlines

Google adds social media to Gmail
Google is introducing Buzz, a group of features that add Facebook and Twitter-like functionality to Gmail.
Montreal inventor unveils 3-D baggage scanner Video
A Montreal inventor has developed a three-dimensional baggage scanner that he says can make air travel safer and more convenient for passengers.
Tech buying bounces back in 2009: NPD
Canadians spent $4.66 billion on computer and information technology products in 2009, up one per cent from 2008.
Google Street View expands across Canada
Google has updated its Street View service with increased coverage to more than 150 cities and towns across Canada.
Astronauts inspect shuttle on way to space station
Endeavour's astronauts have inspected their ship for any launch damage as they raced toward a rendezvous with the International Space Station.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Trenton colonel's charges spur cold case review Video
The 2001 slaying of a Nova Scotia woman at CFB Trenton in eastern Ontario is among the cases being re-examined after murder charges were laid against Col. Russell Williams.
Health costs push Alberta budget deficit to $4.75B Video
Alberta's Progressive Conservative government is projecting a record $4.75-billion budget deficit and planning cuts in many departments while increasing health-care spending.
Ottawa to appeal injection site ruling Video
The federal government is asking the Supreme Court of Canada for leave to appeal a lower court ruling that sanctioned Vancouver's supervised drug injection site.
Haitian man pulled from rubble Video
A 28-year-old man has been pulled from rubble in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, claiming to have been trapped there since the massive earthquake on Jan. 12.
Tories need plan for isotope shortage: Ignatieff
Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff accused the Conservative government of having no plan of action to deal with a medical isotope shortage expected to worsen later this month.