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Keyword: battleoffsamar

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  • Explorers find the world's deepest shipwreck four miles under the Pacific - WW II USS Samuel B. Roberts - Battle of Leyte Gulf

    06/25/2022 1:06:01 PM PDT · by srmanuel · 26 replies
    CNN ^ | 06/25/22 | CNN
    The USS Samuel B. Roberts was recently found by a team led by Victor Vescovo who also found the USS Johnston. Both Ships were lost in the Battle of Leyte Gulf. It lies at a depth of 6,895 meters (22,621 feet), in the Philippine Sea. By comparison, Mount Kilimanjaro's peak is 5,896 meters, while the highest permanent settlement in the world, La Rinconada in the Peruvian Andes, is 5,100 meters (16,700 feet). Previously, the deepest wreck ever identified and surveyed was the USS Johnston, found last year by Vescovo. That lies at 6,469 meters.
  • 'Deepest shipwreck': US WWII ship found off Philippines

    06/25/2022 7:31:51 AM PDT · by devane617 · 39 replies
    phys.org ^ | 06/25/2022
    A US navy destroyer sunk during World War II has been found nearly 7,000 meters (23,000 feet) below sea level off the Philippines, making it the world's deepest shipwreck ever located, an American exploration team said. The USS Samuel B Roberts went down during a battle off the central island of Samar on October 25, 1944 as US forces fought to liberate the Philippines—then a US colony—from Japanese occupation. A crewed submersible filmed, photographed and surveyed the battered hull of the "Sammy B" during a series of dives over eight days this month, Texas-based undersea technology company Caladan Oceanic said....
  • How the Casablanca-class Aircraft Carriers Shook Up World War II

    12/09/2021 6:23:25 PM PST · by Jacquerie · 32 replies
    The National Interest ^ | June 26th 2021 | unknown
    While armed services often crave “gold-plated” weapon systems, Kaiser’s cheap jeep carriers showed how simple, affordable and numerous platforms well-suited to operational requirements can prove to be of greater value. The Casablanca class’ finest hour came in the Battle of Samar, when sixteen CVEs and their escorts covering the amphibious landing at Leyte Gulf single-handedly took on a Japanese battlefleet consisting of four battleships and nineteen cruisers and destroyers. In a frantic few hours, the carriers’ combined air wings and self-sacrificing destroyer escorts managed to sink three cruisers and persuade Admiral Takeo Kurita to withdraw. “Mass-production” isn’t a term one...