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Divers recently identified two Danish slave ships, Fridericus Quartus and Christianus Quintus, during an excavation near ...
Marine archaeologists have made a remarkable discovery off the coast of Costa Rica, shedding new light on a mystery that has ...
Archaeologist David John Gregory recently spoke with Fox News Digital about the haunting discovery of Danish two slave ships, ...
Centuries-old shipwrecks off the coast of Costa Rica, long thought to have been the property of pirates, are actually Danish ...
Marine archaeologists have discovered that two shipwrecks in Costa Rica that were previously believed to be pirate ships are ...
Denmark's National Museum said two 18th-century shipwrecks off the coast of Costa Rica were previously thought to have been ...
This is one of the most dramatic events in Denmark’s maritime history — and now we know where it happened,” said marine ...
Two shipwrecks in Costa Rica were long thought to be sunken pirate ships. New research shows they were actually Danish slave ships. NPR's Ayesha Rascoe talks with archaeologist Andreas Bloch.
At this point, there was no doubt where the ships originated: Denmark. But, how did they make their way to the Costa Rican coast? And how had their journeys come to such violent ends? “According to ...
Archaeologists recently made a startling discovery: They found that two 18th-century shipwrecks off the coast of Central America were actually two Danish slave ships. The ships, named Fridericus ...
“The analyses are very convincing and we no longer have any doubts that these are the wrecks of the two Danish slave ships,” said marine archaeologist David Gregory, a research professor and ...