Surprising WWII shipwreck linked to famous David-vs-Goliath sea battle is found
The Imperial Japanese Navy destroyer Teruzuki was discovered July 10, at a depth of 2,624 feet in the Solomon Islands, the Ocean Exploration Trust reported in a July 12 news release.
Among the revelations made by a remotely operated camera: the 440-foot-long ship was split, with its stern hitting the seafloor 656 feet away from the hull, the trust noted.
And even after 83 years, the wreck remains armed with highly volatile munitions, scientists noted.
'When the exploration team found a 19-meter-long (62-feet) severed segment of Teruzuki's stern littered with depth charges, it disproved a long-held theory that it was depth charge explosions that sealed the ship's fate,' the trust said in its release.
The ship's forward artillery turrets remain pointing skyward, which proved to be the wrong direction, historians say.
To slay a giant
The Teruzuki was massive, stretching nearly 100 feet longer than a football field, yet its demise was dealt Dec. 12, 1942, by two U.S. Navy PT boats that were scarcely 77 feet long, historians say.
A retelling of the sinking by the U.S. Naval Institute notes the PT-boats were firing their torpedoes at 'shadows in the murk,' and only later realized it was the flagship of Rear Admiral Raizo Tanaka — known to historians as 'Tenacious Tanaka' due to 'his courage in leading nighttime attacks.'
'They heard a tremendous roar as thousands of pounds of water soared skyward,' the institute reports.
'One of their torpedoes had struck home near the aft of the ship, immediately rendering the Teruzuki unnavigable and throwing Tanaka himself unconscious to the deck. ... The whole scene (was) bathed in an orange glow as leaking fuel on the Teruzuki ignited, illuminating the crippled Japanese ship for miles.'
The fire eventually reached powder magazines and the Teruzuki 'buckled under a massive explosion' and sank around 4:40 a.m., the institute says. Most of the crew was rescued by nearby Japanese ships.
Historians credit the sinking to PT-37 and PT-40, which escaped before nearby Japanese ships could return fire.
'In just a few minutes' time, they had felled the single largest warship sunk by any PT boat during the war,' the institute reports.
Finding history
The location of Teruzuki was discovered by coincidence, when an uncrewed seafloor mapping vessel spotted evidence of something the size of a ship, the trust says.
Scientists sent a remotely operated vehicle to investigate and found a 'never-before-seen ship' that was heavily damaged and deteriorating.
It was identified with the help of a Japanese researcher on the team, Hiroshi Ishii, of the Center for Southeast Asian Area Studies at Kyoto University in Japan.
Video recorded at the wreck is helping WWII historians rewrite the ship's final hours, the trust says.
'Japanese naval vessel plans were kept highly secret during the war, so much so that no historical images of Teruzuki exist today,' the researchers said. 'This survey is the first ever look at the vessel for this generation.'
The find was made as part of a 21-day expedition in the Iron Bottom Sound that is documenting known WWII wrecks and investigating sites that are suspected to be undiscovered military boats and planes.
Teruzuki is the 12th wreck to be explored during the expedition, which is broadcasting its dives live via Nautiluslive.org.
Five major naval battles were staged in the Iron Bottom Sound region in late 1942, resulting 'in the loss of over 20,000 lives, 111 naval vessels, and 1,450 planes,' the trust says.
'To date, fewer than 100 of these US, Japanese, Australian, and New Zealand military ships and planes have been located,' trust officials said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Miami Herald
a day ago
- Miami Herald
Surprising WWII shipwreck linked to famous David-vs-Goliath sea battle is found
A famed Japanese destroyer lost in 1942 has been found severed on the South Pacific seafloor — the result of a fantastic David-vs.-Goliath sea battle that remains the stuff of legend for the U.S. Navy. The Imperial Japanese Navy destroyer Teruzuki was discovered July 10, at a depth of 2,624 feet in the Solomon Islands, the Ocean Exploration Trust reported in a July 12 news release. Among the revelations made by a remotely operated camera: the 440-foot-long ship was split, with its stern hitting the seafloor 656 feet away from the hull, the trust noted. And even after 83 years, the wreck remains armed with highly volatile munitions, scientists noted. 'When the exploration team found a 19-meter-long (62-feet) severed segment of Teruzuki's stern littered with depth charges, it disproved a long-held theory that it was depth charge explosions that sealed the ship's fate,' the trust said in its release. The ship's forward artillery turrets remain pointing skyward, which proved to be the wrong direction, historians say. To slay a giant The Teruzuki was massive, stretching nearly 100 feet longer than a football field, yet its demise was dealt Dec. 12, 1942, by two U.S. Navy PT boats that were scarcely 77 feet long, historians say. A retelling of the sinking by the U.S. Naval Institute notes the PT-boats were firing their torpedoes at 'shadows in the murk,' and only later realized it was the flagship of Rear Admiral Raizo Tanaka — known to historians as 'Tenacious Tanaka' due to 'his courage in leading nighttime attacks.' 'They heard a tremendous roar as thousands of pounds of water soared skyward,' the institute reports. 'One of their torpedoes had struck home near the aft of the ship, immediately rendering the Teruzuki unnavigable and throwing Tanaka himself unconscious to the deck. ... The whole scene (was) bathed in an orange glow as leaking fuel on the Teruzuki ignited, illuminating the crippled Japanese ship for miles.' The fire eventually reached powder magazines and the Teruzuki 'buckled under a massive explosion' and sank around 4:40 a.m., the institute says. Most of the crew was rescued by nearby Japanese ships. Historians credit the sinking to PT-37 and PT-40, which escaped before nearby Japanese ships could return fire. 'In just a few minutes' time, they had felled the single largest warship sunk by any PT boat during the war,' the institute reports. Finding history The location of Teruzuki was discovered by coincidence, when an uncrewed seafloor mapping vessel spotted evidence of something the size of a ship, the trust says. Scientists sent a remotely operated vehicle to investigate and found a 'never-before-seen ship' that was heavily damaged and deteriorating. It was identified with the help of a Japanese researcher on the team, Hiroshi Ishii, of the Center for Southeast Asian Area Studies at Kyoto University in Japan. Video recorded at the wreck is helping WWII historians rewrite the ship's final hours, the trust says. 'Japanese naval vessel plans were kept highly secret during the war, so much so that no historical images of Teruzuki exist today,' the researchers said. 'This survey is the first ever look at the vessel for this generation.' The find was made as part of a 21-day expedition in the Iron Bottom Sound that is documenting known WWII wrecks and investigating sites that are suspected to be undiscovered military boats and planes. Teruzuki is the 12th wreck to be explored during the expedition, which is broadcasting its dives live via Five major naval battles were staged in the Iron Bottom Sound region in late 1942, resulting 'in the loss of over 20,000 lives, 111 naval vessels, and 1,450 planes,' the trust says. 'To date, fewer than 100 of these US, Japanese, Australian, and New Zealand military ships and planes have been located,' trust officials said.


Boston Globe
2 days ago
- Boston Globe
Basho was an elitist, Thoreau a codependent
I'm a baby boomer. My students were Gen Z. We had different views on things. I expected our classroom discussions to be lively. But still. I heard their thoughts on the reading with outright admiration and stunned incredulity. The whiplash could be unnerving. Get The Gavel A weekly SCOTUS explainer newsletter by columnist Kimberly Atkins Stohr. Enter Email Sign Up Consider poor Basho! The 17th-century Japanese poet walking in the cold rain wearing his sandals and paper coat was apparently an elitist. Wendell Berry — poet, farmer, agrarian essayist, and activist — is crystal clear on his practice of Christian faith, but my students argued that he was actually a Buddhist. And certainly it was jarring to think of Ralph Waldo Emerson and the Transcendentalists as imperialist oppressors. Henry Thoreau (no filter!) didn't have a chance. While rapturous in considerations of solitude, he socialized and dined with friends — often! Obviously, a codependent. And could we read Norman Maclean's classic 'A River Runs Through It' — a story about two brothers, family, God, and trout fishing — from an eco-feminist perspective? Advertisement These reactions to the literature startled me, to put it mildly. But it was hard not to see a certain imagination at work here. For all his humility and deficient outerwear, Basho was an educated man, which likely did qualify him as an elitist of his time. Berry himself identifies as a marginal Christian, and his thinking is not exactly conventional; and perhaps there are beliefs in which these two spheres of faith converge. And of course Thoreau infuriates all of us, especially those of us who most admire him. As with so many original thinkers, he contradicts himself constantly and with endless enthusiasm. 'He is such a geek. A total nerd. But I still love him,' one student concluded. Mark Twain had an admiration for new technologies of the time yet lamented the loss of river life, conflicting sensibilities familiar to us today. Advertisement My students learned about human inconsistencies in belief and temperament. Discovering the ambiguities and minor hypocrisies of those we hold in high regard is part of education. Theirs and mine. Facing up to our own partialities and discriminations comes into it as well. Maybe more to the point, their lack of interest in dogma allowed for unconstrained and broad interpretation. A contempt for established doctrine led them to evaluate the reading in ways that were — needless to say — new to me. Which is probably as it should be. Confounding questions and alternative perspectives have a rightful place in environmental thinking today. How we think and what we do in the natural world now is often confused, complex, contradictory. Beliefs and behaviors defy one another constantly. Knowledge and experience are often at odds. Our ideals and practices are often freakishly out of alignment. Advertisement So what's a college professor to do? Meet our students where they are, as the saying goes today. Although we may all still be in the woods, it helps if we can partner up to learn the names of the trees, the shapes of the leaves. And as a new academic year begins, I'd like to think my own abiding regard for the canon can find a convergence with the unorthodox perspectives offered by my students. Actually, it could even make for the kind of thinking that comes close to what Thoreau advocated more than 150 years ago: not knowledge so much as a 'sympathy with intelligence.' He elaborates only by suggesting 'that there are more things in heaven and earth than are dreamed of in our philosophy,' an inclusiveness in sensibility that my students and I might even agree on.

Wall Street Journal
2 days ago
- Wall Street Journal
In the Hills of Australia, Pacific Allies Are Training to Fight China
TOWNSVILLE, Australia—In the rugged hills outside this coastal city, Japanese and Australian artillery crews fired in tandem on a distant target. They were assisted by U.S. Marines, who were embedded with the Australian gun teams. The live-fire drill was the culmination of Southern Jackaroo, an expanding annual exercise in the Australian bush in which the three nations' forces practice working together as allies.