An autonomous drone fleet overseen by Ocean Infinity has rediscovered the USS Stewart, the only US Navy destroyer ever ...
The USS Stewart, sunk in 1946 for training, was found intact 3,500 feet below the Pacific Ocean near San Francisco.
In May of 1946, the United States Navy gave one of their own battleships, the USS Stewart, a burial at sea—sinking it in a ...
Its story, from U.S. Navy service to Japanese capture and back again, makes it a powerful symbol of the Pacific War’s ...
U ndersea investigators have located the wreck of a century-old US Navy destroyer, USS Stewart, that was lost for nearly 80 ...
The wreckage of a Second World War US Navy destroyer known as the “Ghost Ship of the Pacific” has been discovered off the ...
The newfound wreck could help maritime archaeologists better understand how 20th-century warships were designed.
The USS Stewart, once called the "Ghost Ship of the Pacific," served in both the U.S. and Japanese navies during World War II ...
In 1945, as Japan was occupied at the end of World War II, the ship was found afloat at Kure, Japan. Recommissioned once more ...
This was where the autonomous subs from a company called Ocean Infinity were deployed. Using an array of sonar and other sensors onboard, the flotilla tracked down the remnants of the ship ...
Ocean Infinity, the marine robotics firm that operated the drones that made the discovery, owns the world’s largest fleet of autonomous underwater vehicles. The drones are used to create high ...
release from Ocean Infinity, SEARCH and the Air/Sea Heritage Foundation. “The Stewart served its country one last time as a target ship, absorbing fire from aerial rockets, machinegun ...