MARS
IS FOUND IN SEAFLOOR SURVEY AROUND JAPANESE MINI-SUBMARINE
NOAA and Partners Survey "Flying Boat" Crash Sites
Dec.
14, 2004 — A watery grave off the Hawaiian coast is yielding answers
about World War II-era aircraft and ships. Explorer-researchers from NOAA
and the University of Hawaii joined
with colleagues from the National Park
Service on an ocean mission off the coast of Oahu, Hawaii, to
document sites where historic seaplanes, or flying boats, rest on the
ocean floor. The joint-agency team surveyed an area around the site of a
Japanese mini-submarine that was discovered by NOAA and the University
of Hawaii in 2002. (Click image for larger view of the portside
of the nose of the Marshall Mars upside down on the seafloor. Portions
of the aircraft's name, "Marshall", can still be seen. Click
here for high resolution version, which is a large file. Please
credit “NOAA/HURL.)
NOAA
marine archaeologists conducted two days of survey dives, December 9 and
10, outside of Pearl Harbor. Hans Van Tilburg and Kelly Gleason of the NOAA
National Marine Sanctuary Program and LT. Jeremy Weirich of the NOAA
Office of Ocean Exploration conducted non-invasive documentation of
known underwater shipwreck and aircraft crash sites of U.S. Navy flying
boats dating from as early as the 1920s. They were joined by Jon Jarvis,
regional director of the National Park Service and Doug Lentz, Pearl
Harbor National Park Service superintendent. (Click undated
image for larger view of Marshall Mars showing the size of the “flying
boat” aircraft. Click
here for high resolution version, which is a large file. Photo
courtesy of the U.S. Navy.)
"To
create an inventory of historic items, we're using Hawaii
Undersea Research Laboratory submersibles to systematically explore
the ocean off Pearl Harbor," said Weirich. "That inventory
will help us make better management decisions."
One
seaplane site documented was the Navy's
Marshall Mars, a giant flying boat with a 200-foot wingspan that was
forced by an engine fire to land at sea off Oahu in 1950, where the
seaplane exploded, burned, broke into pieces and sank with no loss of
life. The Mars series of aircraft was built to move cargo, primarily
between California and Hawaii, and Marshall Mars once carried more than
308 people aloft, a record at the time. (Click image for larger
view of the one of the four engines of the Marshall Mars resting on the
seafloor, still attached to the wing, but with its propellor broken off.
Note the writing on one of the twisted propeller blades. Click
here for high resolution version, which is a large file. Please
credit “NOAA/HURL.)
"We
really value the partnership between NOAA, the Hawaii Undersea Research
Laboratory and the National Park Service," said Jarvis,
"because it combines our expertise in documenting these important
underwater resources."
"This
survey means a lot," added Lentz. "We're working with NOAA to
survey a wider area around the site of the Japanese mini-submarine to
determine if there are other resources in the area we want to
protect." (Click image for larger view of the nose of the
Marshall Mars resting upside down on the seafloor. Click
here for high resolution version, which is a large file. Please
credit “NOAA/HURL.)
When the
mini-submarine was discovered in 2002, the four-inch hole in its conning
tower was evidence that crewmembers of the U.S. destroyer Ward were
right when they claimed to have fired the nation's first shot of World
War II, more than a hour before the air attack on Pearl Harbor on
December 7, 1941. In February 2004, the Government of Japan agreed that
the mini-submarine was now the property of the U.S. government.
"Submerged
historic wreck sites are like time capsules from our maritime
past," said NOAA National Marine Sanctuary maritime archaeologist
Hans Van Tilburg. "In this case, naval aircraft sites shed light on
our technological capabilities both before and during World War II.
Seaplanes and flying boats played a critical role in Hawaii and the
Pacific."(Click image for larger view of the Marshall Mars
engines, still attached to a portion of the wing, resting upright on the
seafloor. Click
here for high resolution version, which is a large file. Please
credit “NOAA/HURL.)
George
Hutton was a Navy aviation radioman who flew in four of the five Mars
seaplanes, including the Marshall Mars. "She was a fine flying
boat," he said, "but take off and landing could be a little
hairy, depending on the seas." During one port visit, he walked on
the Mars wing. "It was like a football field," he said. Hutton
was in the Marshall Mars on the first flight of a Mars aircraft west of
Hawaii, opening what would become regular routes to the Philippines, and
he was thrilled to be in the first Mars seaplane to make a jet-assisted
takeoff. In the 1940s and 50s, stories about the Mars seaplanes referred
to crewmembers as "Men from Mars," and when an aircraft set a
new record for persons aloft, media reported "Mars is
Well-Inhabited."
The
seafloor survey mission used HURL’s Pisces IV and V research
submersibles and at a depth of about 1,400 feet, researchers recorded
images of the crash sites, using digital video and still cameras. The
three-man submersibles, capable of diving to 6,000 feet, were piloted by
HURL's senior pilot Terry Kerby and Pilot Max Cremer. Chris Kelley of
HURL used sonar to assist in mapping the sites and in searching for
other heritage resources. (Click close-up image for larger view
of one of the Marshall Mars engines, with exposed machinery, cables and
wires, each corroding away at different rates due to galvanic coupling. Click
here for high resolution version, which is a large file. Please
credit “NOAA/HURL.)
Marshall
Mars artifacts were first discovered during HURL dives in August 2004.
Earlier naval aviation sites in the area have been located, but their
identities have yet to be confirmed.
In
August, when Kerby and others discovered the nose and keel of what
appeared to be a seaplane, Kerby maneuvered the submersible close to the
aircraft's nose where the explorers could clearly read the painted word
"Marshall." They didn't know what they had until HURL's Steve
Price did some research. "Steve showed me the great photo of
sailors standing on the wing of Marshall Mars, and the word
"Marshall," on the seaplane's nose was exciting to see, and
took my memory back to that first day of discovery."
Kerby's
excitement was intact on December 9 after a day of exploring. He had
just brought the Pisces submersible back to the research ship, and he
had new discoveries to describe. "We maneuvered near aircraft
debris that was bent and corroded aluminum with traces of dark blue
paint. Then we came upon a huge engine, nose in to the bottom. Further
on, we saw propellers sticking up, some straight, some twisted, and as
we turned the sub, we saw the propellers were attached to a second huge
engine that was still on the wing. And then we discovered a third
engine. We knew we'd found the main body of Marshall Mars." (Click
undated image for larger view of Marshall Mars exploding at sea
following an engine fire. Click
here for high resolution version, which is a large file. Photo
courtesy of the U.S. Navy.)
The
mission results will aid in documentation of aviation crash sites and
shipwrecks that will yield information about loss events and site
interaction with the marine environment. They will also help confirm the
identity and location of submerged cultural resources located within
Hawaii's protected marine areas.
"Preservation
legislation supports the survey and inventory of these types of
sites," Van Tilburg said. "Navy ships and aircraft are
specifically protected as state vessels and often as potential wargraves."
The NOAA
National Marine Sanctuary Program seeks to increase public awareness of
America's maritime heritage by conducting scientific research,
monitoring, exploration and educational programs. Today, the sanctuary
program manages 13 national marine sanctuaries and one coral reef
ecosystem reserve that encompass more than 150,000 square miles of
America's ocean and Great Lakes natural and cultural resources.
NOAA's
mission includes exploration of the oceans for the purpose of discovery
and the advancement of knowledge. Ocean Exploration benefits NOAA and
the nation by supporting a program of exploration across many
scientific, cultural and technological disciplines, and among many
participants. The NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration promotes
discovery-based science, collaboration, education and outreach.
The
Hawaii Undersea Research Laboratory, or HURL, was established by NOAA
and the University of Hawaii. Its mission is to study deep water marine
processes in the Pacific Ocean.
NOAA is dedicated to enhancing economic security and national safety
through the prediction and research of weather and climate-related
events and providing environmental stewardship of the nation’s coastal
and marine resources. NOAA is part of the U.S.
Department of Commerce.
Relevant
Web Sites
NOAA Office of Ocean
Exploration
NOAA
National Marine Sanctuary Program
NOAA
Reports Discovery of Japanese World War II Submarine
Media
Contact:
Fred
Gorell, NOAA Office of
Ocean Exploration, (301) 713-9444 ext. 181