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Mysterious “Ghost Ships” in the Baltic Sea

Beneath the Baltic Sea lie "ghost ships"—ancient wreckages that have held countless mysteries for centuries. Explore the unexplained tales of these mysterious underwater relics here.


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by Isabella Hall

Many secrets are held within the vast and mysterious body of water that is the Baltic Sea, between Europe's northern coasts. Its greatest unknowns, however, are the "ghost ships", abandoned and coasting slowly across its waters with deteriorating hull planks beneath them and silent decks bathed by unwavering moonlight. These are the spooky relics of an era that's long past, these echoes from times forgotten bear witness to human folly and extinctions (both literal and otherwise) but also time itself—in matters & worlds.

 


Overview of the Ghost Ships

When even the most battle hardened sailor first stakes eyes on a ghost ship it sends chills down their spine. A bit more beguiling are the derelict ships, typically freighters or fishing boats gone to seed, ghostlike and woebegone with broken windows that have crumbled into filigrees of crushed glass; paint peeling away in brittle shards beneath winds gusting along constricted openings between condemned warehouses crowded together harbor side as rigging sags where it tangles over ribs etched dark against rust-eaten skins. They floated along with the currents, engines muted as if steered by ghosts.


The loss of life on the MV Estonia was near 900 Ghost ship, some of them are for sure well-known from the Baltic like Swe. The wreckage is decaying deep at the bottom of the sea, but its ghost lingers, seen as a haunting beacon or maritime tragedy. But the Estonia is only one among many. The other ghost ships, the ones we do not sing songs about, drift uncharted; ghosts lost to time.

 


Reasons to the Ghost Ships

Why these ships were abandoned is anyone's guess, and like the vessels themselves it could be any of ten-lost reasons. Others were wrecked in storms and never had their crew come to shore again. In other cases, they were taken by pirates or crashed due to mechanical breakdown. The rest were abandoned in dry docks where they slowly rotted, relics of the maritime industry that built and then quit on them.


As time goes by, these ghost ships get older and in worst conditions. Their wooden decks rot and their metal frames rust. Their cracks become homes to sea creatures, their hulls overgrown with algae. Now and then their thinned bodies wash ashore in fossil parts, scavenged by the waves for strangers perusing or native fishermen.


Effects from Ghost Ships

Besides the large number of these abandoned ships and dwindling sailing stock, they cause significant adverse environmental effects. Oil & other impurities can seep into the water which then decreases in value and is harmful to marine life. The ships themselves may also be hazards to navigation for other vessels. Then there is the aesthetic and emotional cost those floating tombs present; a constant symbol of human suffering.


There are attempts to clear the Baltic Sea of these ghost ships. However, the work is overwhelming and requires enormous resources. Until then, these ghostly remains keep wandering around the sea with their stories buried beneath the ocean surface for someone to enlighten.


Conclusion

The Baltic Sea ghost ships are a little more than empty hulls. They are human history chiseled in granite, victories and defeats etched on the stone of hundreds of thousands of lives lived. In all the ghosts that sail these waters of ancient sea we must remind us this; in what they are telling grows a fragility to human endeavor and how critical remembering is on our way forward.



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