SS Cotopaxi identified off St. Augustine

D

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It's not exactly military news, but it is naval, and it's a final coda on a story which reached bizarre proportions thanks to Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Also it's in the Navy Times:

SS Cotopaxi Identified after 95 years.

ST. AUGUSTINE, Fla. — Scientists have found the wreckage of a cargo steamship that became associated with the Bermuda Triangle when it disappeared in 1925 off the Atlantic Coast of Florida.

The 250-foot (76-meters) SS Cotopaxi was sailing from Charleston, South Carolina, to Havana when it disappeared along with its 32-person crew. But a team of underwater explorers and maritime archaeologists have identified the wreckage of the ship about 35 nautical miles off the coast of St. Augustine.

“The ship became a part of the Bermuda Triangle myth,'” said Chuck Meide of the Lighthouse Maritime Archaeological Maritime Program.

The ship was missing important structural components and “unbeknownst to the captain and crew, they were sailing into a tropical storm,” Meide said.

The ship set sail on Nov. 29, 1925.
 

PsihoKekec

Swashbuckling Accountant
So the ship was caught in storm, radioed that it is taking water and listing, yet conspiracist idiots somehow thought its vanishing was mysterious.
 

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