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buchananjczt: Recent data analysis shows that there is an 80 to 100 percent chance the ship is still in the harbor. "Because the Lord Sandwich was Capt. Cook's Endeavour," the group said, "that means RIMAP has found her, too." Cook, whom some have called...
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Recent data analysis shows that there is an 80 to 100 percent chance the ship is still in the harbor. "Because the Lord Sandwich was Capt. Cook's Endeavour," the group said, "that means RIMAP has found her, too." Cook, whom some have called "the greatest explorer in history," was from a village near Middlesbrough in North Yorkshire, England, according to a historical profile from the BBC. Cook learned the world's waters while serving in the Royal Navy, according to the BBC. In the mid-1700s, he was named the commander of the HMS Endeavour and sent on a scientific voyage in the Pacific Ocean. From 1768 to 1780, he went on three voyages around the world, during which time he encountered Australia's southeastern coast and claimed it for Britain, according to the BBC. A handwritten letter believed to be penned by Cook after his first trip to Australia was discovered in 2002, BBC News reported at the time. It let the Admiralty know he had returned safely from his three-year voyage to New Ze
Recent data analysis shows that there is an 80 to 100 percent chance the ship is still in the harbor. "Because the Lord Sandwich was Capt. Cook's Endeavour," the group said, "that means RIMAP has found her, too." Cook, whom some have called "the greatest explorer in history," was from a village near Middlesbrough in North Yorkshire, England, according to a historical profile from the BBC. Cook learned the world's waters while serving in the Royal Navy, according to the BBC. In the mid-1700s, he was named the commander of the HMS Endeavour and sent on a scientific voyage in the Pacific Ocean. From 1768 to 1780, he went on three voyages around the world, during which time he encountered Australia's southeastern coast and claimed it for Britain, according to the BBC. A handwritten letter believed to be penned by Cook after his first trip to Australia was discovered in 2002, BBC News reported at the time. It let the Admiralty know he had returned safely from his three-year voyage to New Ze
Recent data analysis shows that there is an 80 to 100 percent chance the ship is still in the harbor. "Because the Lord Sandwich was Capt. Cook's Endeavour," the group said, "that means RIMAP has found her, too." Cook, whom some have called "the greatest explorer in history," was from a village near Middlesbrough in North Yorkshire, England, according to a historical profile from the BBC. Cook learned the world's waters while serving in the Royal Navy, according to the BBC. In the mid-1700s, he was named the commander of the HMS Endeavour and sent on a scientific voyage in the Pacific Ocean. From 1768 to 1780, he went on three voyages around the world, during which time he encountered Australia's southeastern coast and claimed it for Britain, according to the BBC. A handwritten letter believed to be penned by Cook after his first trip to Australia was discovered in 2002, BBC News reported at the time. It let the Admiralty know he had returned safely from his three-year voyage to New Ze
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