- Gutter Sound
Gutter Sound is an inlet of the vast anchorage of
Scapa Flow in theOrkney Islands ofScotland . Gutter Sound was the site of the mass-scuttling of the interned German ImperialHigh Seas Fleet in 1919.cuttling of the fleet
The terms of the the armistice of 11 November 1918 required Germany to surrender the virtual entirety of the
Kaiserliche Marine 's High Seas Fleet to the Allies for the duration of the armistice, and pending a final decision about their fate. In total, 74 ships were brought to Scapa Flow and moored at Gutter Sound, manned by skeleton crews, and under the command of Rear-AdmiralLudwig von Reuter . As negotiations towards the drawing up of theTreaty of Versailles progressed, Reuter feared that the fleet would be seized by the allies. He drew up plans to scuttle it should this appear likely. Eventually, acting on faulty intelligence from dated British newspapers, he decided that the seizure of the ships was imminent and on21 June 1919 he gave the order of commence scuttling the ships.Fifty-two of the seventy-four ships, totalling more than 400,000 tons (more than twice as much tonnage as the combined losses in the
Battle of Jutland ) were successfully sunk, seventeen were towed into shallow water and beached, and four torpedo boats remained afloat. The effort marked the greatest tonnage of ships ever sunk in a day or in a single port.Aftermath
A number of the sunken ships were salvaged, 43 by
Ernest Cox during the 1920s. He used a variety of techniques, lifting the smaller ships withfloating dock s andhawser s. With the larger ships he patched all of the holes and then pumped the hulls withcompressed air to force out the water and make them float upside down. Seven of the wrecks are still in Scapa Flow, and are a popular target for divers.Commercial salvage work on the vessels ceased in the late 1970s and further salvage is no longer technically possible. There was some minor salvage work in the 1990s to remove some of the radiation free metal plating from the wreck of the "Kronprinz Wilhelm". [ [http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A2497494 "The Scuttling of the German High Seas Fleet, 1919", (from BBC's h2g2)] ] , that has been used in space
satellite s and some medical equipment. Metal forged before the firstnuclear detonation in 1945 does not contain any trace ofradioactive isotopes that are now present in the atmosphere. Thebackground radiation of these isotopes could exhibit an effect on fine sensors used in space. [ [http://www.hazegray.org/faq/smn7.htm#G7 "hazegray FAQ"] ]The seven vessels that remain are protected as maritime
scheduled ancient monument s.Diving the wrecks
Today the seven remaining wrecks, though deep, make for popular and interesting dives for skilled scuba divers. In addition, debris and wreckage left from the ships salvaged is sometimes dived as well.
External references
*"The Grand Scuttle: The sinking of the German Fleet at Scapa Flow in 1919." Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1982
References
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