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Argo(barge)

Coordinates:41°38′21″N82°29′35″W/ 41.639167°N 82.493056°W/41.639167; -82.493056
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History
United States
NameArgo
OwnerIndependent Pier Company
OperatorW.J. Townsend
BuilderSpedden Shipbuilding Company
Launched1911
FateSank 1937
General characteristics
TypeTank barge
Tonnage421
Length120 ft (37 m)
Beam34 ft (10 m)
Depth12-foot-6-inch (3.81 m)

TheArgois a tank barge that sank inLake Erieon October 20, 1937. It was carrying nearly 200,000 gallons (4,762 barrels) of crude oil andbenzolwhen it foundered in a storm off ofPelee Island.TheArgowas not designed for open waters. In 2013 the wreck was assessed to be theGreat Lakes shipwreckmost likely to create an environmental disaster. The wreck sat at the bottom of the lake for nearly 78 years before it was discovered in 2015. A three-month cleanup effort involving theU.S. Coast Guard,Canadian authorities, and theNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrationextracted nearly 50,000 gallons of contaminated water from the wreck.

Vessel description

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TheArgowas a steel-hulled tank barge built in Baltimore, Maryland, in 1911 by Spedden Shipbuilding.[1]It was 34 feet (10 m) wide, 120 feet (37 m) long and 12 feet 6 inches (3.81 m) deep. It had eight cargo tanks and, aside from a self-unloading boom, the vessel was a typical example of the era's East Coast barges. It was operated by W.J. Townsend, a businessman fromBayonne, New Jersey,who had a fleet of tugboats and barges.[2]

TheArgowas certified by theAmerican Bureau of Shippingand theBureau of Marine Inspection and Navigationto operate in rivers, sounds, and protected coastal bays surrounding New York City. It was not designed for use in the open waters of theGreat Lakesand its operation in Lake Erie was illegal.[3]

Sinking

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TheArgooriginated in New Jersey and was on a return voyage there from theAlgoma Steelplant inSault Ste. Marie, Ontario,[2]where it had loaded its eight cargo tanks with 1,500 tons of cargo.[4]It was the first time the vessel had traversed the Great Lakes.[2]According to the barge's records, it was carrying nearly 200,000 gallons (4,762 barrels) of crude oil andbenzol,a buoyant petroleum distillate.[5]When the barge was fully loaded, it only had roughly 2 feet 6 inches (0.76 m) offreeboard,violatingload linerules.[2]

Early in October 1937, theArgowas being pulled by the tugboatSyosset.With a heavy northwest storm approaching,[4]the vessels paused nearAmherstburg,at the mouth of theDetroit River.Once the weather settled on October 19, they headed out into Lake Erie.[2]Weather conditions deteriorated and the ships were seeking refuge near the eastern end ofPelee Island.[4]Winds of 20–40 miles per hour (32–64 km/h) caused waves to crash onto theArgo's decks and it began to sink. The two crewmembers onboard made their way to the starboard stern, the only part of the barge above water. They were rescued by theSyossetcrew, who circled back and threw lines to the pair. As theArgosank into the water, it turned onto one side, eventually righting itself before sinking to the bottom.[2][1]

An October 22, 1937 article inThe Evening NewsofSault Ste. Marie, Michiganreported the incident.[4]Captain Henry G. Fisher of the United States Coast Guard'sCleveland districtrelayed that the crew of the USCGC cutterTahomathought they had located theArgoin about 40 feet of water, four miles east of the shoals ofKelleys Island.[4]

Following the incident, a report by the Board of Inquiry of theUnited States Department of Commercemade a recommendation to fine W.J. Townsend, theArgo's owner, but no records have been found to indicate that a fine was ever imposed.[2]The barge and its contents were abandoned to the lake's bottom, slowly sinking into the sediments of the lake bed.[6]

Assessment of hazards

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Research conducted by theNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration(NOAA) in 2013 as part of its Remediation of Underwater Legacy Environmental Threats program identified the wreck of theArgoas a potential source of pollution.[6]It was thought that the barge was carrying about 100,000 gallons of heavy crude oil and that much of the benzol would have volatilized at the time of the wreck.[5]TheArgowas placed on a list of hazardous shipwrecks and a 2013 NOAA report assessed it as being the Great Lakes shipwreck most likely to create an environmental disaster.[3]The assessment led to a joint tabletop exercise simulating a hypothetical spill from theArgo,conducted by Canadian officials and the U.S. Coast Guard in 2014.[7]

Discovery

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On August 28, 2015,[8]the sunken wreck was detected by Tom Kowalczk, a member of the Cleveland Underwater Explorers (CLUE).[9]Equipped with aside-scan sonarsystem, Kowalczk had been looking for another wreck, that of the wooden schoonerLexington,that sank in 1846 with a cargo of 110 barrels of whiskey and a safe rumored to contain gold.[10]

The wreck of theArgowas discovered inside the U.S. line, eight miles east of Kelley's Island Shoal,[2]and about five or six miles south of the location historically given for the barge,[5]in Canadian waters, about 13 miles north of Lakeside in western Lake Erie.

CLUE reported their discovery to theNational Museum of the Great Lakes,which had been a sponsor of their shipwreck efforts. They then informed the Coast Guard of their findings.[1]

Cleanup

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Coworkers inspect a diver in a positive pressure dive suit prior to conducting dive operations as a response to the shipwreck on November 24, 2015.

The three-month cleanup effort involved the U.S. Coast Guard, Canadian authorities, NOAA, and the contractor T&T Salvage.[11]

The initial dive operations were complicated by the unknown thickness of the hull and a lack of the barge's architectural plans.[3]Officials knew that the vessel had been carrying nearly 200,000 gallons of heavy crude oil and benzol. It was assumed that the cargo was composed of half of each substance.[5][3]

The wreck was covered in "hundreds of thousands, if not millions" ofzebra mussels.[3]and their presence made it difficult to determine whether or not the hull was cracked.[5]

A dive team from the Cleveland Underwater Explorers descended on October 23, 2015, and observed an unknown substance leaking from the hull. It was highly concentrated, eating away at the diver's masks and dive suits.[11]The leak of a petroleum-based solvent was confirmed the following day by the Coast Guard.[5][3]The barge's eight cargo tanks were found to be intact, with the exception of the leak, which originated from a small rivet hole. An analysis of the leaking substance indicated that it consisted predominantly of benzene with small amounts of a light petroleum product.[12]

Efforts to recover the contents of the cargo tanks continued until December 2015. Ahot tappingprocess proceeded after crews scraped off the zebra mussels.[3]The removal of oil and other chemicals to another vessel was accomplished throughlighteringoperations.[12]The crews used a pumping system that was designed to avoid collapsing the ship while the extraction took place, but only extracted 50,000 gallons of contaminated water.[11]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcPaskert, Jim; Kowalczk, Tom."Sinking the Argo".Shipwrecks and Maritime Tales of Lake Erie Shipwrecks.Archivedfrom the original on December 6, 2022.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  2. ^abcdefghEllison, Garret (December 1, 2015)."Toxic Lake Erie shipwreck never should have been on Great Lakes".MLive.Archivedfrom the original on July 26, 2021.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  3. ^abcdefgMacDonald, Evan (October 26, 2015)."Crews working to identify leak in shipwreck suspected to be the Argo".Cleveland.com.Archivedfrom the original on January 31, 2020.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  4. ^abcde"Barge is Down with 100,000 Gallons of Oil"(PDF).The Evening News.October 22, 1937.Archived(PDF)from the original on June 29, 2023.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  5. ^abcdefWilliams, Rebecca (October 27, 2015)."Meet the guy who discovered the shipwreck believed to be the Argo".Michigan Radio.Archivedfrom the original on 2021-10-18.Retrieved2023-06-29.
  6. ^ab"NOAA Involved After Barge Argo, the Lake Erie Shipwreck Lost in 1937, Resurfaces with Oily Leak in U.S. Waters".Office of Response and Restoration.NOAA. October 28, 2015.Archivedfrom the original on March 27, 2023.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  7. ^Patch, David (October 26, 2015)."Shipwreck likely polluting lake".The Blade.Archivedfrom the original on June 9, 2021.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  8. ^Hutley, CDR Tedd; Mangoni, T.J.; Schweitzer, LCDR Greg (May 1, 2017)."Tank Barge ARGO: A Case Study on the Employment of NCP Special Teams".International Oil Spill Conference Proceedings.2017(1): 498–514.doi:10.7901/2169-3358-2017.1.498.
  9. ^Blackwell, Brandon (October 25, 2015)."Shipwreck discovered in Lake Erie could be toxic, long-sought Argo".Cleveland.com.Archivedfrom the original on May 14, 2023.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  10. ^Eby, David L. (March 1, 2021)."The Shipwrecks of Monroe County".Monroe News.Archivedfrom the original on February 6, 2023.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  11. ^abcGoldberg, Madison (May 12, 2022)."How Shipwrecks Shape the Seafloor".Smithsonian Magazine.Archivedfrom the original on June 1, 2023.RetrievedJune 29,2023.
  12. ^ab"What Was the Fate of Lake Erie's Leaking Shipwreck, the Argo?".Office of Response and Restoration.NOAA. December 10, 2015.Archivedfrom the original on May 29, 2023.RetrievedJune 29,2023.

Further reading

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  • Heden, Karl Erik (1966).Directory of Shipwrecks of the Great Lakes.Bruce Humphries Publishers.ISBN978-0-8283-1390-2.
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41°38′21″N82°29′35″W/ 41.639167°N 82.493056°W/41.639167; -82.493056