List of shipwrecks of Oceania
Appearance
This is a list of shipwrecks located in the region of Oceania.
Australia
[edit]Melanesia
[edit]Fiji
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Harriet | United Kingdom | 16 July 1837 | A whaler wrecked on Providence Reef in the Fiji Islands. | |
Tuaikaepau | New Zealand | 6 July 1962 | A cutter that ran aground on the South Minerva Reef. | 23°55′19″S 179°05′34″W / 23.92194°S 179.09278°W |
New Caledonia
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
I-17 | Imperial Japanese Navy | 19 August 1943 | A Type B1 submarine that was sunk by US aircraft and the Royal New Zealand Navy minesweeper HMNZS Tui south of New Caledonia. | 23°26′S 166°50′E / 23.433°S 166.833°E |
Norfolk Island
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
HMS Sirius | Royal Navy | 19 March 1790 | First Fleet ship that sank on the reef in Slaughter Bay, Norfolk Island, while landing stores |
Papua New Guinea
[edit]Micronesia
[edit]Federated States of Micronesia
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Agano | Imperial Japanese Navy | 15 February 1944 | An Agano-class cruiser that was torpedoed by the United States Navy submarine USS Skate 160 nautical miles (296 km; 184 mi) north of Truk. | 10°11′N 151°42′E / 10.183°N 151.700°E |
Aikoku Maru | 17 February 1944 | An armed merchantman that was sunk during Operation Hailstone. The remains of 400 men were recovered from the wreck and cremated in 1984. | 07°22′N 151°56′E / 7.367°N 151.933°E | |
Fujikawa Maru | An armed aircraft transport that was sunk during Operation Hailstone | |||
Fumizuki | 18 February 1944 | A Japanese Mutsuki-class destroyer that was sunk during Operation Hailstone. | 07°24′N 151°44′E / 7.400°N 151.733°E | |
Heian Maru | 17 February 1944 | A Japanese submarine tender that was sunk during Operation Hailstone. | ||
I-169 | 4 April 1944 | A Japanese Kaidai-class submarine that participated in the attack on Pearl Harbor, and sank northwest of Dublon, when it flooded while diving to avoid an air-raid. | ||
Planet | Germany | 7 October 1914 | A survey ship that was scuttled to prevent capture. | |
Sankisan Maru | Japan | A Japanese freighter that was sunk during Operation Hailstone. | ||
Shinkoko Maru | A Japanese oil tanker that was sunk during Operation Hailstone. | |||
Tachikaze | Imperial Japanese Navy | 18 February 1944 | A Japanese Minekaze-class destroyer that ran aground at Kuop Atoll on 4 February 1944, and remained stranded until it was sunk in Operation Hailstone. | 07°03′N 151°56′E / 7.050°N 151.933°E |
Umikaze | 1 February 1944 | A Japanese Shiratsuyu-class destroyer that was torpedoed by USS Guardfish south of Chuuk. | 07°10′N 151°43′E / 7.167°N 151.717°E |
Guam
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
USS Acadia | United States Navy | 20 September 2010 | A Yellowstone-class destroyer tender sunk as a target off Guam. | |
Aratama Maru | Imperial Japanese Navy | 1944 | An Imperial Japanese Navy transport sunk in Talofofo Bay. | |
SMS Cormoran | Imperial German Navy | 7 April 1917 | A German steamer scuttled in Apra Harbor to avoid capture at the start of American involvement in World War I. | 13°27′33″N 144°39′15″E / 13.45917°N 144.65417°E |
Kitsugawa Maru | Japan | A Japanese merchant freighter sunk by torpedo in Apra Harbor. | ||
Tokai Maru | Imperial Japanese Navy | 1943 | An Imperial Japanese Navy armed transport sunk in Apra Harbor. |
Kiribati
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Canton | United States | A whaling ship that ran aground at Kanton Island. | ||
Golden Sunset | United Kingdom | 1866 | A British barque that ran aground at Enderbury Island.[2] | |
Norwich City | 29 November 1929 | A British freighter that ran aground at Nikumaroro. | 4°39′39″S 174°32′40″W / 4.66083°S 174.54444°W | |
President Taylor | United States Army | 14 February 1942 | After carrying two companies of infantry and two battalions of coast artillery, about 1,100 men, for the Canton (Kanton) Island garrison, and possibly due to loss of an anchor while landing troops and equipment by means of shallow draft craft from outside the lagoon, the ship became firmly grounded on the coral reef. The hull was eventually scrapped by 6 April 1955. |
Marshall Islands
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
USS Anderson | United States Navy | 1 July 1946 | A Sims-class destroyer that was sunk at Bikini Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | |
USS Apogon | 25 July 1946 | A Balao-class submarine that was sunk at Bikini Atoll in an atomic bomb test, Operation Crossroads. | ||
USS Arkansas | A Wyoming-class battleship that was sunk at Bikini Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | |||
USS Barrow | 11 May 1948 | A Gilliam-class attack transport that sustained heavy damage in atomic bomb tests and was scuttled off Kwajalein. | ||
USS Carlisle | 1 July 1946 | A Gilliam-class attack transport that was sunk at Bikini Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | ||
USS Gilliam | A Gilliam-class attack transport that was sunk at Bikini Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | |||
Kembu Maru | Japan | 4 December 1943 | A Japanese freighter that was sunk by US aircraft at Kwajalein Atoll. | 09°19′N 167°25′E / 9.317°N 167.417°E |
USS Lamson | United States Navy | 2 July 1946 | A Mahan-class destroyer that was sunk at Bikini Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | |
USS LST-545 | 12 May 1948 | An LST-542-class tank landing ship that was sunk at Enewetak Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | ||
USS LST-661 | 25 July 1948 | An LST-542-class tank landing ship that was sunk at Enewetak Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | ||
Nagato | Imperial Japanese Navy | 30 July 1946 | A Japanese Nagato-class battleship that sustained heavy damage in an atomic bomb test at Bikini Atoll, and capsized and sank five days later. | |
USS Pennsylvania | United States Navy | 10 February 1948 | A Pennsylvania-class super-dreadnought battleship, that was sunk off Kwajalein after atomic bomb tests. | |
USS Pilotfish | 25 July 1946 | A Balao-class submarine that sunk at Bikini Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | 30°26′N 140°53′E / 30.433°N 140.883°E | |
Prinz Eugen | Kriegsmarine | 22 December 1946 | A German Admiral Hipper-class heavy cruiser that was damaged at Bikini Atoll by atomic bomb tests, and later towed to Kwajalein where it capsized and sunk. | 8°45′9.85″N 167°40′59.16″E / 8.7527361°N 167.6831000°E |
Sakawa | Imperial Japanese Navy | 2 July 1946 | A Japanese Agano-class cruiser that sustained heavy damage in an atomic bomb test at Bikini Atoll, and sank the following day. | 11°35′N 165°23′E / 11.583°N 165.383°E |
USS Saratoga | United States Navy | 25 July 1946 | A Lexington-class aircraft carrier that was sunk at Bikini Atoll in an atomic bomb test. | 11°34′53.33″N 165°29′54.78″E / 11.5814806°N 165.4985500°E |
Toreshima Maru | Imperial Japanese Navy | December 1943 | A Japanese supply ship sunk at Maloelap Atoll off Taroa Island by US Navy. |
Palau
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Amatsu Maru | Japan | 31 March 1944 | A Japanese tanker that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |
Bichu Maru | 30 March 1944 | A Japanese freighter that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | ||
Chuyo Maru | Imperial Japanese Army | 31 March 1944 | A Japanese freighter (army cargo vessel) that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |
Gozan Maru | 30 March 1944 | A Japanese troopship that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | ||
Irō | 31 March 1944 | A Japanese Notoro-class oil tanker that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. She was the sister ship of Sata. | ||
Kamikaze Maru | A Japanese troopship that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |||
Kibi Maru | A Japanese freighter (army cargo vessel) that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |||
Nagisan Maru | A Japanese freighter (army cargo vessel) that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |||
USS Perry | United States Navy | 13 September 1944 | A Clemson-class destroyer that was sunk by a naval mine off Anguar. | 6°53′N 134°10′E / 6.883°N 134.167°E |
Raizan Maru | Imperial Japanese Army | 31 March 1944 | A Japanese freighter (army cargo vessel) that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |
Ryuko Maru | A Japanese freighter (army cargo vessel) that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |||
Samidare | 25 August 1944 | A Japanese Shiratsuyu-class destroyer that was torpedoed by USS Batfish after running aground on Velasco Reef. | 8°10′N 134°38′E / 8.167°N 134.633°E | |
Sata | 31 March 1944 | A Japanese Notoro-class oil tanker that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. She was a sister ship of Irō. | ||
Teshio Maru | A Japanese freighter (army cargo vessel) that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |||
Urakami Maru | A Japanese repair ship that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | |||
Wakatake | 30 March 1944 | A Japanese Wakatake-class destroyer that was sunk during Operation Desecrate One. | 7°50′N 134°20′E / 7.833°N 134.333°E |
Wake Island
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Dashing Wave | United Kingdom | 31 August 1870 | A British tea clipper that struck a reef and sank. | |
Hayate | Imperial Japanese Navy | 11 December 1941 | A Japanese destroyer sunk by US Marines. | 19°10′N 166°22′E / 19.167°N 166.367°E |
Kisaragi | 18°55′N 166°17′E / 18.917°N 166.283°E | |||
Libelle | Bremen | 4 March 1866 | A German barque that shipwrecked on the eastern reef during a gale.[3] |
New Zealand
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Anjou | France | 5 February 1905 | A barque that struck rocks off the Auckland Islands. | 50°46′37″S 165°53′15″E / 50.777075°S 165.887516°E |
Arahura | New Zealand | 24 January 1952 | A passenger and cargo steamer that was sunk for target practice in Cook Strait. | |
Boyd | United Kingdom | October 1809 | A brigantine that was attacked by Maori warriors at Whangaroa. The ship was destroyed by fire during the resulting Boyd massacre. | |
HMS Buffalo | Royal Navy | 28 July 1840 | A storeship that was wrecked in a storm in Mercury Bay, with two lives lost. | 36°49′36.20″S 175°42′20.00″E / 36.8267222°S 175.7055556°E |
HMNZS Canterbury | Royal New Zealand Navy | 3 November 2007 | A Leander-class frigate that was scuttled as a dive wreck in the Bay of Islands. | 35°11′38″S 174°17′40″E / 35.1938°S 174.2944°E |
Cowan | New Zealand | 9 March 1948 | A wooden steam trawler that struck rocks in Lyttelton Harbour. | |
Darra | 1951 | A tea clipper, later used as a coal hulk, intentionally beached in Lyttelton Harbour. | ||
Derry Castle | United Kingdom | 20 March 1887 | A barque that ran aground on Enderby Island. | 50°29′04″S 166°18′10″E / 50.484323°S 166.302761°E |
Dolphin | New Zealand | 9 December 1862 | A cutter wrecked near Quail Island, Lyttelton Harbour, New Zealand | |
Dundonald | United Kingdom | 7 March 1907 | A barque that was wrecked in a storm off Disappointment Island, where the survivors remained for seven months until rescued. | 50°36′29″S 165°57′17″E / 50.607938°S 165.954817°E |
Elingamite | Australia | 5 November 1902 | A steamship that struck West Island (one of the Three Kings Islands) and sank within 20 minutes. | 34°11′10″S 172°01′54″E / 34.186047°S 172.031590°E |
England's Glory | United Kingdom | 7 November 1881 | By getting too close in while waiting the arrival of the pilot.[4] | off Nelson |
Endeavour II | Canada | 22 February 1971 | A three-masted auxiliary barque driven onto the bar of Parengarenga Harbour, a few miles south of North Cape. There were no fatalities amongst the crew of thirteen men and one woman.[5] | 34°31′18″S 173°00′37″E / 34.521762°S 173.010206°E |
General Grant | United States | 14 May 1866 | A barque that drifted into a cave on the western shore of the Auckland Islands and sank. | |
Holmbank | New Zealand | 21 September 1963 | A coastal trading vessel that was lost off Banks Peninsula | |
Holmglen | 24 November 1959 | A coastal trading vessel that was lost off Timaru. | 44°31′20″S 171°41′22″E / 44.5223°S 171.6894°E | |
Hydrabad | United Kingdom | 24 June 1878 | A cargo and passenger sailing ship that was beached in the North Island in a storm. | |
Kaitawa | New Zealand | 24 May 1966 | A collier that capsized near Cape Reinga. | |
Mikhail Lermontov | Soviet Union | 16 February 1986 | A Soviet passenger liner that ran aground in the Marlborough Sounds. | 41°02′32″S 174°13′10″E / 41.042087°S 174.219496°E |
RMS Niagara | United Kingdom | 19 June 1940 | An ocean liner that struck a mine and sank off Bream Head while carrying a secret consignment of gold from the Bank of England. | 35°51′50″S 174°56′38″E / 35.86389°S 174.94389°E |
Novelty | New Zealand | 1877 | A steam ship wrecked off Quail Island, Lyttelton Harbour, New Zealand | |
HMS Orpheus | Royal Navy | 7 February 1863 | A Jason-class corvette that ran aground on the Manukau Heads, with 189 lives lost. | 37°04.1′S 174°28.3′E / 37.0683°S 174.4717°E |
Penguin | New Zealand | 12 February 1909 | A ferry that foundered off Cape Terawhiti. | |
Port Kembla | 18 September 1917 | A cargo ship that was sunk by a mine off Farewell Spit. | ||
HMNZS Puriri | Royal New Zealand Navy | 14 May 1941 | A coastal cargo boat that was converted into a minesweeper, and hit a mine off Bream Head 25 days after being commissioned. | 35°46′15″S 174°43′00″E / 35.77083°S 174.71667°E |
Queen Bee | United Kingdom | 7 August 1877 | A barque that ran aground on Farewell Spit.[6] | 40°30′00″S 172°52′00″E / 40.50000°S 172.86667°E |
Rainbow Warrior | Netherlands | 2 December 1987 | A fishing trawler that was purchased by Greenpeace in 1978 for use as a fundraising and protest ship. She was sabotaged and sunk by the French secret service at Auckland on 10 July 1985, and although later refloated, was found to be beyond repair and finally scuttled in Matauri Bay. | 34°58′29″S 173°56′06″E / 34.9748°S 173.9349°E |
Rena | Liberia | 5 October 2011 | A container ship that ran aground on Astrolabe Reef, resulting in New Zealand's worst oil spill. The wreck broke apart and sank in January 2012. | 37°32′25″S 176°25′45″E / 37.54028°S 176.42917°E |
HMS Sandfly | Royal Navy | 1868 | A passenger paddle steamer used as a gunboat during the New Zealand Wars. In 1865 she reverted to civilian use and became Tasmanian Maid, before being wrecked off New Plymouth. | |
Sydney Packet | Australia | 17 July 1837 | A schooner that was wrecked in a storm off Moeraki, Otago. | |
Tararua | New Zealand | 29 April 1881 | A passenger steamer that struck a reef off Waipapa Point and sank the next day, claiming over 100 victims. | 46°40′07″S 168°51′44″E / 46.6686°S 168.8622°E |
HMS Torch | Royal Navy | 17 November 1924 | An Alert-class sloop that ran aground in the Chatham Islands. | |
Torrington | Australia | 27 June 1851 | A brig wrecked in a storm in Lyttelton Harbour | |
HMNZS Tui | Royal New Zealand Navy | February 1999 | An oceanographic survey and research ship that was scuttled as a dive wreck. | 35°35′00″S 174°32′22″E / 35.5832°S 174.5394°E |
Victory | 3 July 1861 | A steamship that ran aground off Otago Peninsula. | 45°50′33″S 170°43′56″E / 45.8425°S 170.7321°E | |
Wahine | New Zealand | 10 April 1968 | A passenger ferry that ran aground and capsized, with 51 lives lost. | |
HMNZS Waikato | Royal New Zealand Navy | 18 December 2000 | A Leander-class frigate that was scuttled off Tutukata as an artificial reef. | 35°39′10″S 174°32′40″E / 35.6528°S 174.5445°E |
Wairarapa | New Zealand | 29 October 1894 | A luxury steamer that hit a reef off Great Barrier Island. | 36°04′03″S 175°21′07″E / 36.0674°S 175.3519°E |
HMNZS Wellington | Royal New Zealand Navy | 13 November 2005 | A Leander-class frigate that was scuttled off the coast of Wellington. | 41°21.18′S 174°46.80′E / 41.35300°S 174.78000°E |
William and John | New Zealand | 27 June 1851 | A 10-ton cutter wrecked in a storm in Lyttelton Harbour |
Polynesia
[edit]French Polynesia
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Lady of St Kilda | United Kingdom | A schooner that was wrecked sometime shortly after 1843. |
Hawaii
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
USS Admiral W. L. Capps | United States Navy | |||
USS Arizona | 7 December 1941 | A battleship lost in the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor. | 21°21′53″N 157°57′00″W / 21.364775°N 157.950112°W | |
USS Barbero | 7 October 1964 | A Balao-class submarine sunk as a target off Pearl Harbor. | ||
Bering | Russia | January 1815 | The Russian-American Company ship (also spelled Behring; formerly Atahualpa, an American maritime fur trade vessel) wrecked at Waimea Bay, Oahu.[7][8] | |
USS Carbonero | United States Navy | 27 April 1975 | A Balao-class submarine sunk as a target. | |
Carrier Dove | United States | 21 November 1921 | A schooner that struck a reef off Molokai. | |
Carthaginian II | December 2005 | A sailing boat that was sunk as an artificial reef. | 20°51′45.8″N 156°40′30.7″W / 20.862722°N 156.675194°W | |
Cleopatra's Barge | Hawaii | 6 April 1824 | The royal yacht of King Kamehameha II that ran aground in Hanalei Bay. | |
USS Darter | United States Navy | 7 January 1992 | A submarine that was disabled in a collision with Kansas Getty, and sunk as a target off Pearl Harbor. | |
Ehime Maru | Japan | 9 February 2001 | A Japanese fishery high school training ship sank about 9 nautical miles (17 km) off the south coast of Oahu, after a collision with United States Navy submarine USS Greeneville. Nine of its crewmembers were killed, including four high school students. | |
I-18 | Imperial Japanese Navy | A Japanese midget submarine depth-charged at Pearl Harbor. | ||
I-401 | 31 May 1946 | An I-400-class submarine that was sunk as a target off Kalaeloa. | ||
Kad’yak | Russia | 1816 | The Russian-American Company ship (also spelled Kad’iak and Kodiak; formerly Myrtle), wrecked at Honolulu Harbor, Oahu.[8] | |
USS LST-480 | United States Navy | 21 May 1944 | A tank landing ship sunk following the West Loch Disaster in Pearl Harbor. | |
USNS Mission San Miguel | 8 October 1957 | A fleet oiler run aground on Maro Reef. | ||
USS S-28 | 4 July 1944 | An S-class submarine that sunk off Oahu. | ||
USS Saginaw | 29 October 1870 | A sloop-of-war that ran aground off Kure Atoll. | ||
San Pedro | United States | 1996 | Sunk by Atlantis Submarines Hawaii as an artificial reef. | |
USS Stickleback | United States Navy | 29 May 1958 | A Balao-class submarine sunk in a collision with USS Silverstein. | |
USS Tinosa | November 1960 | A Gato-class submarine that was scuttled after being used as an anti-submarine warfare target. | ||
USS Utah | 7 December 1941 | A former battleship converted to a training and target ship lost in the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor. | 21°22′8″N 157°57′45″W / 21.36889°N 157.96250°W | |
YO-257 | 1989 | Sunk by Atlantis Submarines Hawaii as an artificial reef. |
Pitcairn Islands
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
Acadia | 5 June 1881 | A mail ship that was wrecked on Ducie Island. | ||
Bowdon | April 1893 | A ship that was wrecked on Oeno Island. | ||
Cornwallis | 23 January 1875 | A ship that was wrecked on Pitcairn Island. | ||
Khandeish | 25 September 1875 | A ship that was wrecked on Oeno Island. | ||
Oregon | 23 August 1883 | A ship that was wrecked on Oeno Island. | ||
Wild Wave | 5 March 1858 | A 1,500-ton clipper ship that was wrecked on Oeno Island. |
Samoa
[edit]Ship | Flag | Sunk date | Notes | Coordinates |
---|---|---|---|---|
SMS Adler | Imperial German Navy | 16 March 1889 | A gunboat that was wrecked in the 1889 Apia cyclone. | 13°49′36″S 171°45′53″W / 13.8266°S 171.7647°W |
SMS Eber | A warship that was wrecked in the 1889 Apia cyclone. | 13°49′53″S 171°45′07″W / 13.83139°S 171.75194°W | ||
Staghound | British Australian colony | 21 November 1862 | Drove ashore during a gale. | |
USS Trenton | United States Navy | 16 March 1889 | A warship that was wrecked in the 1889 Apia cyclone. |
Solomon Islands
[edit]Ironbottom Sound
[edit]Ironbottom Sound is the name given to the stretch of water between Guadalcanal and Florida Island, because of the dozens of ships and planes that sank there during the Guadalcanal Campaign in 1942–43.
References
[edit]- ^ "USS McKean (i) (APD 5)". uboat.net. Retrieved 1 January 2024.
- ^ "Enderbury Island, Phoenix Group, Republic of Kiribati". Janeresture.com. 28 September 2008. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
- ^ "Spennemann, The wreck of the Libelle and other early European Visitors to Wake Island, Central Pacific". Marshall.csu.edu.au. 9 October 2005. Retrieved 27 April 2010.
- ^ "Wellington". Queensland Times, Ipswich Herald And General Advertiser. Vol. XXII, no. 3002. Queensland, Australia. 8 November 1881. p. 3. Retrieved 27 April 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
- ^ Taylor, Roger (1 February 2008). Voyages of a Simple Sailor. Waltham Cross: The FitzRoy Press. ISBN 978-0955803505.
- ^ 'Wreck of the Queen Bee, from London', pg 2, Nelson Evening Mail, 8 August 1877
- ^ Malloy, Mary (1998). "Boston Men" on the Northwest Coast: The American Maritime Fur Trade 1788-1844. The Limestone Press. pp. 74–75. ISBN 978-1-895901-18-4.
- ^ a b Grinëv, Andrei V. (Fall 2011). "Russian Maritime Catastrophes during the Colonization of Alaska, 1741–1867". The Pacific Northwest Quarterly. 102 (4). Translated by Bland, Richard L. University of Washington: 178–194. JSTOR 24624633. Retrieved 1 December 2020.
Further reading
[edit]- Diggle, Lynton (2014). Shipwrecks of New Zealand: Companion to New Zealand Shipwrecks, 8th edition (2nd ed.). Auckland: Lynton Diggle. ISBN 9780473197247.
- Edwards, Hugh (1978). Australian and New Zealand Shipwrecks & Sea Tragedies. Sydney: Currawong Press. ISBN 090800110X.
- Ingram, C.W.N.; Wheatley, Percy Owen; Diggle, Lynton; Diggle, Edith; Gordon, Keith (2007). New Zealand Shipwrecks: Over 200 years of disasters at sea (8th ed.). Auckland: Hodder Moa. ISBN 9781869710934.
- McLean, Gavin (2007). Full astern!: an illustrated history of New Zealand shipwrecks. Wellington, NZ: Grantham House. ISBN 9781869341039.
- Taylor, Peter (2006). The Australian and New Zealand list of vessels lost, missing or taken from active service 1874-1949. Newport, Vic: Scuttlebutt Press. ISBN 9780975175460.
- Wilkinson, Doug (1974). Shipwreck : Selected New Zealand maritime accidents. Wellington, NZ: Southern Press. OCLC 1419297.
External links
[edit]- WRECKSITE Worldwide free database of + 65,000 wrecks with history, maritime charts and GPS positions