Shackleton's ship Endurance was found in 2022, 3,000 meters down on the Antarctic seafloor - lost since 1915. The name still stood out across the stern. The freezing water had kept the wooden hull almost perfectly preserved for 107 years. Shackleton lost the ship in the ice - but all 28 men survived a 22-month ordeal and made it home.

Shackleton's Ship Found Perfectly Preserved 2 Miles Down

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Three thousand metres below the surface of the Weddell Sea, in total darkness and near-freezing water, a wooden ship sat undisturbed for more than a century - waiting to be found.

The Ship That Should Not Exist

In March 2022, the Endurance22 expedition - organised by the Falklands Maritime Heritage Trust and led by polar geographer Dr. John Shears and marine archaeologist Mensun Bound - deployed autonomous underwater vehicles into the Weddell Sea, one of the most remote and treacherous bodies of water on Earth. On 5 March 2022, they found what they were looking for.

At a depth of 3,008 metres - nearly two miles - the cameras lit up the hull of Ernest Shackleton's three-masted ship Endurance, resting upright on the seafloor approximately four miles south of the position Captain Frank Worsley had recorded when she sank in 1915. The name ENDURANCE was still clearly legible in raised lettering across the stern, framed by the ship's five-pointed polar star emblem. The ship's wheel stood upright. The bell remained attached. Coils of rope still lay draped across the deck.

Why It Survived 107 Years

Mensun Bound called it "by far the finest wooden shipwreck I have ever seen." The explanation for the ship's extraordinary condition lies in the Antarctic environment itself. The Weddell Sea's near-freezing temperatures are hostile to the wood-boring organisms - bivalves and bacteria - that devour wooden shipwrecks in other oceans. Those organisms simply do not exist in the Weddell Sea. Without them, and without light or warmth to accelerate decay, the ship's timber hull had barely aged. Even personal items from the crew were still recognisable on the seafloor: dining plates, a flare gun - the very one photographer Frank Hurley had fired into the air as the ship went down in 1915 - and a boot belonging to one of the crew. Mensun Bound said you could peer through the portholes into the dark interior of the cabin where Shackleton had slept.

The Story It Ends

Endurance had been beset by pack ice in the Weddell Sea in early 1915 during Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition. She was slowly crushed over months, sinking on 21 November 1915. What followed was one of history's most extraordinary survival stories: all 28 men endured 22 months on the ice and open ocean, with Shackleton eventually sailing 800 miles in a lifeboat to reach South Georgia and organise a rescue. Every man came home.

The wreck is now designated a Historic Site and Monument under the Antarctic Treaty and was left entirely undisturbed in situ. The expedition filmed it, surveyed it in 3D - and left it exactly as it was found. A ship in near-perfect condition, 3,008 metres down, in the dark.

Frequently Asked Questions

When was Shackleton's Endurance shipwreck found?
The wreck of the Endurance was discovered on 5 March 2022 by the Endurance22 expedition, led by Dr. John Shears and marine archaeologist Mensun Bound. It was found at a depth of 3,008 metres in the Weddell Sea, Antarctica.
Why is the Endurance wreck so well preserved after 107 years?
The Weddell Sea's near-freezing temperatures are hostile to the wood-boring organisms that destroy wooden shipwrecks in other oceans. Those organisms simply do not exist in Antarctic waters. Without them, and without light or warmth to accelerate decay, the ship's wooden hull has barely aged since it sank in November 1915.
How deep is the Endurance shipwreck?
The Endurance lies at a depth of approximately 3,008 metres - nearly two miles - on the floor of the Weddell Sea in Antarctica, about four miles south of where Captain Worsley originally recorded the sinking.
What can you see on the Endurance wreck today?
The 2022 expedition footage shows the name ENDURANCE still legible in raised lettering across the stern, the ship's wheel standing upright, the bell still attached, coils of rope on the deck, and even personal items including dining plates, a flare gun, and a boot. Mensun Bound said you could peer through the portholes into the cabin where Shackleton had slept.
Did anyone survive the Endurance sinking?
Yes. All 28 men aboard survived. After the ship was crushed by pack ice and sank in November 1915, Shackleton led his crew through a 22-month ordeal across the ice and open ocean - eventually sailing 800 miles in a lifeboat to South Georgia to organise a rescue. Every man came home.

Verified Fact

Core facts verified against Endurance22 official site (endurance22.org/endurance-is-found), History Hit (historyhit.com/endurance-wreck-discovered-in-antarctica), Smithsonian Magazine, and NPR. Discovery date March 5 2022 confirmed by Endurance22 and Falklands Maritime Heritage Trust. Depth 3,008m confirmed by multiple sources. Ship's wheel, bell, stern name ("ENDURANCE"), coils of rope, dining plates, flare gun all confirmed in expedition footage and press releases. Mensun Bound quote ("finest wooden shipwreck") confirmed. Preservation explanation (absence of wood-boring organisms in Antarctic cold water) confirmed via Polar Latitudes and scientific citation. All 28 men survived confirmed. Sinking November 21 1915 confirmed. Antarctic Treaty Historic Site and Monument designation confirmed. Mensun Bound portholes/Shackleton cabin quote confirmed via Smithsonian source. YouTube embed O-QAZn0xpB8 (National Geographic UK) verified live.

Endurance22 / Falklands Maritime Heritage Trust

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