Mensun bound

3 min read

MEET THE ADVENTURER

A LIFETIME OF EXPEDITIONS LED TO THE BRITISH MARITIME ARCHAEOLOGIST’S ULTIM ATE FIND — THE LONG-LOST ENDURANCE WRECK

IMAGE: ESTHER HORVATH/FALKLANDS MARITIME HERITAGE TRUST

How did you first get started in maritime archaeology?

As a kid, I’d write letters to George Bass, an American professor of underwater archaeology who used to contribute to National Geographic magazine. He actually responded, and we carried on this correspondence for many years — me begging him to take me along on one of his expeditions, him always finding a reason not to. 

Until, many years later [following Mensun’s studies in ancient history and archaeology], he asked if I could be on the Greek island of Kos in a week’s time. I didn’t ask any questions. This was my open door, and I walked through it.

What sparked your interest in shipwrecks, in particular?

While working for George off the coast of Turkey, we had some wonderful discoveries, including ancient shipwrecks. That’s what really got me into it. I then came back to England to work on the Mary Rose, the great ship of Henry VIII that sank in the Solent [a strait north of the Isle of Wight], before starting my own team.

What was your first big discovery?

Alexander McKee, the man who found the Mary Rose, told me about another diver he’d met on the Italian island of Giglio who’d stumbled upon an ancient wreck. Joanna — now my wife — and I went to see him, and I knew then that I’d blundered into something of outstanding archaeological interest. We spent the next four years excavating; what we found was a ship from 600 BCE.

What did that lead to?

The Giglio wreck was the start of 32 years of work, sometimes on three to five wrecks a year, from Southeast Asia to the Caribbean. I also started the first academic maritime archaeological unit in England at Oxford University. But of course, the crowning moment was last year’s discovery of the Endurance [the lost vessel of Antarctic explorer Sir Ernest Shackleton, found at the bottom of the Weddell Sea 107 years after it sank].

Is that the highlight of your career?

Yes, that was the absolute high point — the search took 10 years and was incredibly expensive. I’ve also run the biggest ever underwater explorations and, on a job in Vietnam, we used saturation diving [involving staying at extreme depths for long periods] for the first and only time in underwater archaeology. I love being at the forefront, the cutting edge.

How did you prepare for the Endurance expedition?

I buried myself in archives to narrow down a search box, which ended up being 107sq nautical m