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| The Maritime Archaeology Trust says it will put any information collected online for "future generations" [Credit: BBC] |
The information collected by the Forgotten Wrecks of the First World War project will then be put online.
It is thought the south coast could have 700 relatively unknown wrecks. These include merchant and naval ships, passenger, troop and hospital ships, ports, wharfs and crashed aircraft.
'Lost forever'
The four-year project is due to commence this spring. Some sites in the UK are official war graves but many are unrecognised and unprotected.
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| The trust said the south coast could have 700 relatively unknown shipwrecks from WW1 [Credit: BBC] |
"There is a real risk that knowledge of these wrecks, if not fully researched, could be lost forever. This project is not only timely, but essential to help raise the profile of maritime conflicts in the history books of tomorrow."
Stuart McLeod, head of the HLF South East, said the charity had invested �47m in projects commemorating the centenary of World War One.
Source: BBC News Website [March 28, 2014]







