How Satellites Find Shipwrecks From Space

Satellite images of shipwrecks
Long sediment plumes extend from the wreck sites of the SS Sansip and SS Samvurn i this image from the NASA/USGS Landsat satellite. (Image credit: NASA/USGS Landsat/Jesse Allen/NASA Earth Observatory/Matthias Baeye et. al.)

It's estimated that some three million shipwrecks are scattered across the oceans, with a quarter possibly resting in the North Atlantic. Now satellites can be used to help locate these lost ships, according to new research.

In a study published in the Journal of Archaeological Science, marine geologist Matthias Baeye at the Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences and colleagues explain that wrecks produce Suspended Particulate Matter (SPM) concentration signals which can be detected by high-resolution ocean color satellite data such as NASA's Landsat-8.

'Landsat-8 data is free and therefore the method presented in the study is an inexpensive alternative to acoustic and laser survey techniques,' Baeye and colleagues wrote.

"SPM plumes are indicators that a shipwreck is exposed at the seabed and certainly not buried," Baeye and colleagues wrote.

According to the researchers, it's the exposed structure of the ships that creates scour pits around the wrecks. These act as sinks where fine-grained suspended material is deposited during slacks (the period of relatively still currents between ebb and flood tides).

"The ability to detect the presence of submerged shipwrecks from space is of benefit to archaeological scientists and resource managers interested in locating wrecks," the researchers concluded.

Originally published on Discovery News.