
A vintage car was discovered in the shipwreck of the USS Yorktown in the Pacific Ocean thanks to an underwater investigation, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ( NOAA ).
The NOAA made the recent discoveries that the NOAA Ocean Exploration and its partners made during the” Papahnaumokukea ROV and Mapping expedition” of the USS Yorktown on April 19 and 20 in a Tuesday press release.
This U.S. Navy aircraft carrier participated in a number of World War II procedures before being sunk by a Chinese underwater following the Battle of Midway, according to the NOAA media release. These non-disturbance jumps were the first to examine the boat’s aircraft board, revealing a number of unanticipated discoveries.
The USS Yorktown accident was first discovered in 1998 by Dr. Robert Ballard, the U.S. Navy, and the National Geographic Society, according to the NOAA. According to the NOAA, subsequent exploration “produced answers to existing queries and uncovered new mysteries for historians and scientists.” It expanded on past expeditions.
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While “peering into the forward airport board from the port area of USS Yorktown,” the NOAA announced that its staff “noticed a faint design of , , an car.” During the April 20 dive, the NOAA’s team “tentatively identified the vehicle as a 1940-41 Ford Super Deluxe’ Woody’ in black.”
This car is believed to have been used for Rear Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher, Captain Elliott Buckmaster, or other ship crew members while USS Yorktown, Yorktown, was conducting business in foreign ports, according to the NOAA, with the word” SHIP SERVICE __ _ NAVY” written on a portion of its front plate.
Divers also discovered a hand-painted painting in one of the elevator shafts of the USS Yorktown, in addition to the antique vehicle. A map of the USS Yorktown’s different journeys, according to the NOAA, is featured in the painting, which is called” A Chart of the Vacations of the USS Yorktown.”
The NOAA stated in a press release on Tuesday that the ship’s motifs, which measure about 42 feet by 12 feet,” demonstrate the confidence that Yorktown’s sailors had for their fleet, the global level of its activities, and the proper role that the ship played in defending the United States.”
Images of the most recent tragedy discoveries were shared on X, previously Online, on Tuesday.