A hoard of silver coins worth £34million that was sunk by the Nazis on board a steamship has been salvaged by a British-led team at a record depth of 5,150m (17,000ft)

A hoard of silver coins worth £34million that was sunk by the Nazis on board a steamship has been salvaged by a British-led team at a record depth of 5,150m (17,000ft).

The SS City of Cairo was travelling from Bombay to England in 1942 when it was torpedoed by a U-boat 480 miles south of St Helena, taking 100 tons of rupees with it to the bottom of the ocean.

It was long ᴀssumed that the vessel’s cargo, belonging to the UK Treasury, would be lost forever such was the complexity of the task facing salvage experts.

Mjc5NkY2OEIwMDAwMDU3OF8zMDM5Njc0X2ltYWdlX2FfMV8xNDI5MDk2NDQzNTUyLmpwZw==.png

Treasure trove: Some of the 100 tons of rupees found buried in the ocean floor at a record depth of 17,000ft after the cargo ship they were being transported on was sunk by a Nazi submarine during World War Two

Mjc5NkY2OTEwMDAwMDU3OF8zMDM5Njc0X2ltYWdlX2FfMl8xNDI5MDk2NDU0ODI5LmpwZw==.png

Record find: Some coins are raised to the surface during a pioneering recovery project by a British-led team

Hidden: The City of Cairo was finally discovered (above) ‘broken in two and buried deep in the seafloor silt’

Mjc5NkY1MTMwMDAwMDU3OF8zMDM5Njc0X2ltYWdlX2FfNF8xNDI5MDk2NDc2MTA3LmpwZw==.png

Underwater company Deep Ocean Search used powerful sonar to locate the vessel on the sea floor

That was until a team led by British expert John Kingsford used pioneering techniques to track down the ship with powerful sonar and robotics.

Underwater company Deep Ocean Search (DOS), which included 20 French oceanographers, was then contracted by the UK Ministry of Transport to recover the coins from a record depth of 17,000ft – some 4,500ft deeper than the тιтanic.

A spokesman for DOS said: ‘This was to be a difficult search as the water depth would exceed 5,000m, the weather, swell and currents were known to be challenging and the presumed site was some 1,000 miles from the nearest land in the foothills of the mid-Atlantic ridge.’

When the ship was finally discovered, it was ‘broken in two and buried deep in the seafloor silt’, adding that ‘parts of the ship had metres of mud heaped upon it.’

Mjc5QzIxQjAwMDAwMDU3OF8zMDM5Njc0X2ltYWdlX2FfNTdfMTQyOTEzNzUwMTI1Mi5qcGc=.png

The SS City of Cairo was sunk en route from Bombay to India, via Cape Town and Recife in Brazil

Mjc5NkY2QzIwMDAwMDU3OF8zMDM5Njc0X2ltYWdlX2FfN18xNDI5MDk2NTMyNTc0LmpwZw==.png

The rupees, belonging to the UK Treasury, were being transported from India to England when the ship sunk

Mjc5NkY3NEMwMDAwMDU3OF8zMDM5Njc0X2ltYWdlX21fMThfMTQyOTA5NzE4NzczMy5qcGc=.png

Underwater company Deep Ocean Search, which included 20 French oceanographers, was contracted by the UK Ministry of Transport to recover the coins from a record depth of 17,000ft – 4,500ft deeper than the тιтanic

Mjc5NkY2NjIwMDAwMDU3OF8zMDM5Njc0X2ltYWdlX2FfOF8xNDI5MDk2NTQwNjU0LmpwZw==.png

Keeping it under wraps: The recovery took place in 2013, but has only now been made public

Maeva Onda, one of the oceanographers on board the salvage ship, SV John Lethbridge, said the search submarine was successful on its first dive.

‘After two hours of underwater descent, the robot transmitted the first images of the wreck. It was incredible,’ she told Le Figaro, as cited by the Daily Telegraph.

The find was confirmed when the robot brought up coins stamped with the Crown.

But the team suffered ‘serious’ problems trying to recover the bulk of the hoard because of the depths involved.

The spokesman for DOS said: ‘The team quickly found that operating at this depth caused serious technical difficulties which were new to us and which had to be resolved, quickly.

‘The combination of pressure, temperature, repeated dives at this depth and other issues resulted in multiple breakdowns of systems such as we had not experienced before when working in 3000m to 4000m depths.’

The recovery took place in 2013, but has only now been made public.

DOS has left a plaque commemorating their find on the sea bed.

Mjc5NkY2OUQwMDAwMDU3OF8zMDM5Njc0X2ltYWdlX2FfOV8xNDI5MDk2NjE4NjIzLmpwZw==.png

Maeva Onda, one of the oceanographers on board the salvage ship, SV John Lethbridge, said the search submarine was successful on its first dive, adding: ‘It was incredible’

Related Posts

The Bronze Head of Medusa: A Tale of Myth and Art at Hadrian’s Villa

Unearthing Ancient Beauty in Tivoli In the heart of Italy, near the town of Tivoli, lies a treasure trove of Roman history – Hadrian’s Villa. This UNESCO…

The incredible story of the Siège d’Amour: How a Cabinetmaker created the ultimate piece of Furniture for pleasure!

Siège d’Amour, also known as the Love Chair, is an extraordinary and highly imaginative chair that was designed for King Edward VII, who was then known as…

Unearthed in the dry highlands of southern Peru, this remarkably preserved mummy dates back to the pre-Inca period, around 800 to 1200 CE.

  AFP News Agency/YouTubeArchaeologists have determined that the remains belong to a boy between the ages of 10 and 15. Archaeologists determined that the mummy was a…

Ancient Civilization Found Beneath the Waves? Myth Resurfaces as Reality

A City Drowned, a Secret Resurfaced In the still, blue silence of the ocean depths, a team of divers has uncovered a site that could rewrite everything…

Legendary Fighter Plane Found

YouTube / History X Searchers have found the wreckage of WWII fighter Ace Richard Bong’s P-38 Lightning in the South Pacific, its red paint giving it away….

What You Should Know About Nikola Tesla, Anti-Gravity Tech, and Creating a Perfect UFO

TV, AC electricity, the Tesla Coil, fluorescent lighting, neon lights, Radio-controlled devices, robotics, X-rays, radar, microwave, and dozens of other amazing inventions were invented by one of…