Wreckage of HMAS Sydney found off West Australian coast
Alison Rehn with AAP
March 17, 2008 09:30am
PRIME Minister Kevin Rudd has confirmed the wreck of the HMAS Sydney has been found nearly 2.5km underwater off the coast of Western Australia.
The Sydney's entire crew of 645 went down with the ship in the Indian Ocean in November, 1941, and its location has been a mystery for more than 66 years.
The ship was found using a high-resolution geosounder to examine deep water off Western Australia, about 800km north of Perth and about 240km off Shark Bay.
The wreckage of the German merchant raider Kormoran, believed to have sunk the Australian warship, was found before the discovery of the Sydney in 2560m of water.
Early images show that the Sydney's hull remains largely intact and upright on the ocean floor.
Australia's most enduring maritime tragedy happened as the Sydney was sunk returning to Fremantle when it met the German raider disguised as the Dutch freighter, Straat Malakka.
A battle ensued from which neither ship survived.
Eighty men from the 397-strong crew of the Kormoran perished.
Many theories about the fate of Sydney's crew have surfaced over the decades, arising from a struggle to understand why there were no survivors.
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