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Remarkable footage reveals 'frozen in time' shipwreck of lost Arctic expedition

Going inside the wreck of HMS Terror, a ship lost for over 150 years, for the first time.

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Jackson Ryan was CNET's science editor, and a multiple award-winning one at that. Earlier, he'd been a scientist, but he realized he wasn't very happy sitting at a lab bench all day. Science writing, he realized, was the best job in the world -- it let him tell stories about space, the planet, climate change and the people working at the frontiers of human knowledge. He also owns a lot of ugly Christmas sweaters.
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Images from inside the wreck of HMS Terror show a ship frozen in time.

Parks Canada

Divers have explored the eerie wreck of HMS Terror, a doomed 19th century expedition ship, for the first time, discovering plates, firearms, bottles and other artifacts. HMS Terror and a second ship, HMS Erebus, sank during an 1845 expedition led by explorer Sir John Franklin after becoming trapped in ice and abandoned. None of the crew survived and the ships were lost for 170 years.

After discovering HMS Erebus in 2014 and HMS Terror in 2016, the wrecks are being investigated by underwater archaeologists and researchers are hopeful they hold clues to some of the expedition's remaining mysteries.

Parks Canada's Underwater Archaeology Team dove into the wreck of HMS Terror 48 times over the course of a week in early August, exploring 20 of the ship's compartments for the first time. The hazy new images show the wreck as it was after being abandoned in the 1840s and incredible footage reveals unbroken plates and firearms untouched, in addition to bottles still upright in the storeroom, covered in silt.

Parks Canada provided a guided tour of the wreck in the video below. It's unreal.

During these dives, the archaeology team didn't bring any artifacts back to the surface and suspect that important documents likely lie within the drawers and storage compartments within Captain Francis Crozier's cabin, one of the most well-preserved sections of the ship. Those compartments haven't been opened since HMS Terror was abandoned.

"There's definitely real potential of coming across paper materials and written documentation," director Ryan Harris told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Data from this dive will help develop a plan for the underwater archaeology team to continue studying the shipwreck and its myriad artifacts.

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