Pressing Excavation on Studland Seashore
Marine archaeologists raced towards highly effective tides to excavate a Seventeenth-century shipwreck uncovered on Dorset’s Studland Seashore, a widely known nudist spot. Storm Chandra uncovered the stays on the finish of January by stripping away centuries of protecting sand, revealing what specialists imagine is a part of the Swash Channel Wreck.
The Swash Channel Wreck is recognized because the Dutch service provider vessel The Fame of Hoorn, which grounded close to Poole Harbour in 1631 throughout a fierce storm. Fearing additional injury from incoming gales, a staff from Bournemouth College collaborated with native college college students from the Nationwide Belief’s youth group for a speedy restoration operation on Thursday.
Because the tide pulled again round 10 a.m., the group shoveled away tons of sand to reveal and thoroughly dismantle a six-meter-long (20 ft) by two-meter-wide (seven ft) part from the midship hull earlier than the water returned.
Ship’s Historic Background
Constructed within the Netherlands in 1628, The Fame of Hoorn measured roughly 40 meters (130 ft) in size, 10 meters (33 ft) in width, and 15 meters (50 ft) in top. The vessel carried a minimum of 26 cartridge-mounted weapons for protection towards pirates whereas transporting salt from the Caribbean, and it may double as a warship if wanted.
Historic data point out the crew of 45 deserted the ship safely after it struck the infamous Hook Sands sandbank. Looters and salvagers possible stripped the wreck afterward. Divers first positioned it within the Nineteen Nineties, resulting in main excavations that recovered a 40-meter portion, together with a formidable 8.4-meter (28-foot) rudder adorned with a carved moustachioed man’s head—the biggest marine restoration because the Mary Rose in 1982. Nevertheless, vital sections and a minimum of 20 weapons remained unaccounted for.
Evaluation of Recovered Timbers
The newly uncovered timbers function 15 picket frames joined by treenails—giant picket pegs—to 5 outer hull planks. Whereas the frames present deterioration, the planks stay remarkably preserved, suggesting burial in sand because the 1630s with periodic exposures over time. Consultants observe an interior planking layer is lacking, in line with long-term sand entombment.
Tom Cousins, marine archaeologist at Bournemouth College who surveyed the timbers, said: “Throughout our 2013 excavation of the Swash Channel Wreck, items of the ship had been lacking, and we imagine this hull part has now surfaced at Studland.”
Sarah Coggins, coast and marine advisor for the Nationwide Belief, defined: “In 1630, this seaside part was open sea. Over 400 years, sand deposits fashioned the dunes, wetlands, and shoreline seen at the moment at Studland, burying the wreck in sand slightly than on the seabed.”
Verification and Significance
Dendrochronology evaluation will date the bushes used for the planks, offering essential proof in the event that they match confirmed Swash Channel Wreck supplies. This protected web site, one among solely 57 below England’s Safety of Wrecks Act 1973, holds exceptionally uncommon pre-1700 stays.
Hefin Meara, maritime archaeologist from Historic England, famous: “Firmly dated stays of vessels predating 1700 are exceptionally uncommon. We won’t verify these fragments originate from that wreck web site but, but it surely’s an intriguing risk.”

