Recovery and Identification of the Victims of the Ehime Maru/USS Greeneville Collision at Sea

Recovery and Identification of the Victims of the Ehime Maru/USS Greeneville Collision at Sea

Auteur : JA. Lewis, CY. Shiroma, KV. Guenthner, KN. Dunn

Date de publication : 2004

Éditeur : ASTM International

Nombre de pages : 4

Résumé du livre

This paper describes the recovery and identification of crew members lost during a collision at sea. On 9 February 2001, south of Honolulu, Hawaii, the Japanese fishing training boat, Ehime Maru was struck by the USS Greeneville (SSN 772), a Los Angeles-class fast attack submarine. Witnesses estimate that the vessel sank within 5-10 min after the collision. Nine of the 35 crew members remained unaccounted for after rescue procedures were completed. The U.S. Navy attempted the unprecedented procedure of moving the boat from a depth of 610 m (2000 ft) into shallower waters so that the missing could be located and recovered. Eight of the nine crew members were recovered and identified by their dental records.

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