惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

GbyAI
GbyAI
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
F
Fortinet All Blogs
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
OSCHINA 社区最新新闻
A
About on SuperTechFans
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
月光博客
月光博客
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
P
Proofpoint News Feed
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
C
Check Point Blog
U
Unit 42
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
V
Visual Studio Blog
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
D
DataBreaches.Net
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
H
Hacker News: Front Page
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
Latest news
Latest news
小众软件
小众软件
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Security Latest
Security Latest
S
Secure Thoughts
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
P
Proofpoint News Feed
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
O
OpenAI News
S
Securelist
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
H
Help Net Security
T
Troy Hunt's Blog

Latest Content - Popular Mechanics

I Swapped My Skateboard for an Electric Scooter, and I'm Never Looking Back Tight Schedule? These Battery Packs Keep Your Phone, Tablet, and Laptop Charged All Day You Don't Need to Overspend to Get an Effective Trail Camera. These Smart, Stealthy Picks Will Get The Job Done. I Found Toys at the Beach and Change at the Park, Testing These Expert-Approved Metal Detectors Early Prime Day Apple Deals Are Now Live on Amazon—Here’s What Shoppers Should Add to Cart ASAP Here's How Yeti's Newest Camp Chair Stacks Up Against the Best We've Tested Skip the Ice With One of These Editor-Recommended Portable Refrigerators Yes, Dyson Did Well In My Vacuum Testing. But It’s Not the One I Recommend for Most People. Roborock Reigns Supreme for Robot Vacuums—But These Other Editor-Tested Models Are Worth a Look The 8 Best Ductless Air Conditioners for Efficient Home Cooling Our Results for Best Dishwashers Are In. Here’s Why This Bosch Model is the One to Buy. The Coolest Tech Gifts of the Year Are Here. These Gadgets Will Blow Gearheads Away. Have a Handyman in Your Life? Any Gifts On This List Will Bring Them a Smile. The Best Electronic Deadbolts for Securing Your Home, Even When You Forget the Keys Tired of Pool Cleaning Eating Up Your Weekend? These Robots Can Do It For You There’s a New Best Bang-for-Your-Buck Flashlight—and It’s a Collab With Jeep Our Favorite Ceramic and Radiant Space Heaters Warm You Fast. But Which Style Is Actually Best? The Best Gaming Desktops For Every Spec and Budget The TCL QM8L SQD Mini-LED TV Brings More Color and Brightness to Last Year’s Top TV The 8 Best Pocket Knives for Everyday Carry and More This $30 Tarp Solves More Camping Problems Than You Think The World Is Running Out of People—and the Next 40 Years Could Determine the Fate of Humanity Thieves Stole a Legendary Egyptian Artifact. But They Missed the Terrifying 4,000-Year-Old Fine Print Inside. The 9 Best Carpet Cleaners to Lift Set-In Stains and Eliminate Odors They Froze a Brain to −196°C. Then Brought It ‘Back to Life’ in a Groundbreaking New Study. Russia Is Perfecting This Formidable Weapon Fast—Making Iran’s Drones ‘Significantly Deadlier’ One Piece x Lego Is Official—New Sets Are Available for Preorder Now Tick Season Is Getting Worse. These Prevention Tips And Products Can Help Counterfeit SSDs Are Getting Harder to Spot: Here’s How to Make Sure You Aren’t Getting a Fake Trying to Pick a Jackery Power Station? Start With These Models Today’s Trail Running Sneakers Are Perfectly Fine for a Hike Scientists Say Black Holes Are Breaking Their Own Rules of Physics Is Your Patio Umbrella Not Providing Enough Shade? Here's Why You Should Upgrade to a Cantilever. Despite the Government’s Ban, Netgear Just Got an Exemption to Keep Selling New WiFi Routers in the U.S. Our Editors Swear You Don’t Need $1K to Upgrade Your Patio—Here’s How The Vacmaster Beast Is Nothing More or Less Than a Damn Good Shop Vac The Bissell PowerClean FurGuard Vacuum Has Features I Didn’t Know I Needed This Creature Was Supposed to Die—But Turned Back Into a Child. Could It Hold the Secret to Immortality? A Lost Treasure. A Deadly Storm. How Divers Accidentally Found a Legendary Pirate Ship—and the Secrets Aboard. Scientists Are Figuring Out How These Trees Survived a Nuclear Bomb These Lawn Sweepers are Perfect For Clearing Leaves Right Now and Grass Clippings Next Spring Archaeologists Discovered a Roman Superhighway Buried Deep Underground Scientists Just Confirmed One of the Greatest Mysteries of Our Universe. Now What? Archaeologists Excavated a 900-Year-Old Castle—and Found a Lost Nuclear Bunker Save $250 On The Best Robot Vacuum We’ve Tested We Ranked the 33 Best Time Travel Movies Ever You’re Not Unlucky—Your Brain Is Sabotaging You. But There’s a Way to Claw Back Control, Scientists Say. Tired of Tangled Hoses? This Retractable Pick Fixed My Backyard Instantly Scientists Think Dark Matter May Be Filling Our Galaxy With Mysterious Light Toro Super Recycler Review: One of the Last Buy-It-for-Life Mowers Breeo’s Live-Fire Grill Is a Delightfully Analog Way to Cook If You Prefer an Open Fire Archaeologists Just Found Remains of an Ancient Christian Monastery Scientists Think They Could Design Entire Cities That Heal Your Brain Two Men Stole a Glowing Blue Cylinder in an Abandoned Hospital—and Unleashed a Nuclear Nightmare Nazis Stole the ‘Eighth Wonder of the World.’ 80 Years Later, Treasure Hunters Still Can’t Find It Husqvarna’s 320iHD60 Hedge Trimmer Helps You Groom Your Hedges in Record Time Make Better Barbecue All Year Round With These Expert-Approved Smokers Archaeologists Unearthed a 6,200-Year-Old Megastructure. Its Purpose Is Still a Mystery. This Scientist Found the Secret to Nuclear Fusion in 1938. Then History Erased His Name. She Was the Crown Jewel of the Titanic’s First Class. After 112 Years in the Abyss, Divers Finally Found Her. The 6-GHz WiFi Band Is Ultra-Fast. But It’s Probably Not Worth Splurging for Unless You Have This One Need. No, You Don’t Need to Put a Screen Protector on Your Phone A Navy Blimp Crash-Landed on a City Street. Why Had the Crew Completely Vanished? Scientists Made Something Out of Nothing. Literally. Scientists Studied the Dreams of People Who Nearly Died. What They Found Is Incredible. A Metal Detectorist Found a 1,200-Year-Old Coin With a Mysterious Link to Early Christianity Archaeologists Found a 2,000-Year-Old Garden Beneath a Church. It May Be the Site of Jesus’s Tomb. Yeti’s Trailhead Field Camp Chair Is Light, Relatively Affordable, and Comfortable. Still, at This Price, I Want a Cupholder. The Gooloo GT6000 Tested: Rapid Recharging, Reliability, and Safety Make It A Must-Have for Vehicle Owners The Walensee Dethatching Rake Helped Me Fix My Lawn This Spring A Historian Found Evidence of a Hidden Army Inside the Roman Empire Archaeologists Found a 440-Year-Old Coin that Marked the Lost Site of a Doomed Colony Shark Wandvac Review: The Cadillac of Hand Vacuums Scientists Just Created Super-Strong Steel That Never Rusts. It'll Change Manufacturing. Grampa's Weed Puller Is a $40 Tool That Will Save Your Back This Spring Jackpot! Archaeologists Just Found the World's Oldest Dice. Scientists Say the Universe Will Eventually Tear Itself Apart The Air Force Asked This Man to Investigate UFOs—Then Pushed Him Away After What He Found They Thought This Priest Was Poisoned. When the CT Scan Came Back, the Truth Was So Much Weirder. A Newly Discovered Clue Finally Revealed Why the Sun Mysteriously Went Dark for 70 Years Scientists Successfully Made Advanced, Lab-Grown Brains—Could They Become Conscious? DeWalt’s 2,600-PSI Electric Pressure Washer Is a Small But Mighty Cleaning Tool Your Consciousness Persists After You Die, Research Suggests—Meaning There Are Hidden Layers to Death Ryobi Expand-It String Trimmer Review We Tested These Spring Lawn Care Essentials So You Don’t Have To I Tested Milwaukee’s Flagship Cordless Hammer Drill for a Year. Here’s Why It Became My Go-To. Scientists Discovered the Secret Behind Earth’s “Gold Kitchen” Sit in This Bizarre Chair—You’ll Have an Out-of-Body Experience, Engineer Claims Crabs Are Moving Into the Chernobyl of the Sea. Why Do They Love 1.6 Million Tons of Explosives? This $16 Billion Megabridge Could Be an Engineering Masterpiece—Or a Terrifying Disaster in Waiting Treasure Hunters Found a Legendary $43 Million Fortune. Then the Government Swooped In. Uniden R7 Radar Detector: Why Our Favorite Model Delivers the Best Protection for the Price Anker Nano Power Bank vs. Belkin Portable Charger: Which Battery Pack Is More Worth It? TP-Link’s Archer BE3600 Router Is a Fast, Affordable Entry Into Wi-Fi 7 Camping With the Whole Family? These 8 Tents Are Spacious and Easy to Pitch. Is Your Fur Baby Turning Your Home Into an Allergy Disaster Site? These Vacuums for Pet Hair Can Help The 8 Best Binoculars, According to Our Tests and Research In a Crowded Field, Leatherman's Arc Is the New Best Multitool For Its Power, Durability, and Ease of Use The 41 Best Tool Gifts for the DIYer on Your List These Best-Tested Portable Air Conditioners Are a Viable Alternative to Window Units. Here’s Why.
Archaeologists Dove Into Unknown Waters—and Found Two Shipwrecks From World War II
2026-05-06 · via Latest Content - Popular Mechanics

Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:

  • The World War II-era battle for the Aleutian Island of Attu claimed two shipwrecks—one from Japan and one from the United States.
  • Recent explorations found and investigated those wrecks for the first time, using sonar and drones to document the underwater battlefield.
  • American bombers sank the Japanese ship, while the American ship ran aground on an underwater pinnacle.

Researchers recently dipped into the Bering Sea to investigate one of the least-studied theaters of World War II. They came away with evidence of two lost ships—the Kotohira Maru from Japan and the SS Dellwood of the United States—that sank near Attu, one of Alaska’s Aleutian Islands.

Researchers used sonar, underwater drones, and historical records to locate the ships, which were lost during the buildup and aftermath of the three-week Battle of Attu in 1943. In this first systematic survey of Attu’s underwater cultural heritage—now published in the journal Heritage—researchers found that the remains of the Japanese transport ship and the American cable-layer had experienced far different fates.

The Kotohira Maru was launched in 1918 by Osaka Iron Works Ltd. The 6,101-ton vessel was a coal-powered, single-screw steam ship and general cargo carrier, and it supported the invasion of Burma (now Myanmar) before being reassigned to the Kuril Island sector (Japan’s northernmost outpost).

On Dec. 31, 1942, the Kotohira Maru headed to Attu without an escort, carrying lumber, provisions, fuel, and supplies for Japanese soldiers. (It may have also transported a platoon of troops, but that isn’t certain.) While approaching the island from the west early in the morning of January 5, 1943, the Kotohira Maru rounded Attu’s northeastern corner in search of Holtz Bay, Japan’s most heavily defended position. While doing so, it was spotted by an American pilot and subsequently bombed by American B-24 Liberators. A 500-pound explosive eventually sank the Kotohira Maru, sending it—and its final crew of 30-50 sailors, all of whom died in the attack—to depths of nearly 300 feet.

Historical reports from the American pilots gave the research team a starting point for their search, which eventually located the Kotohira Maru largely intact. The ship was sitting upright, with its recognizable hull lying near the severely damaged (and detached) bow, matching an account that indicated a direct bomb strike to the bow. Cargo hatches, a steam engine, a scotch boiler, and the ship’s distinctive counter stern were all clearly visible.

The SS Dellwood’s fate was entirely different. The ship was transferred to the U.S. Maritime Commission 10 days after Japan’s attack on Pearl Harbor, having started its life as a cable ship in 1919. In a military capacity, it ran regular trips from Seattle and the Puget Sound to northern military facilities in Alaska. The Dellwood arrived at Attu in July 1943 following the U.S.’s victory at the Battle of Attu and set to work establishing a cable between the island’s command headquarters and the newly established airfield on the island of Shemya. Unfortunately, the ship struck an uncharted, submerged pinnacle off Attu’s Alexai Point, near the entrance of Massacre Bay. Other ships came to the aid of the Dellwood, but the damage was severe, so salvage personnel stripped it of valuables before it sank.

This latest exploration discovered the Dellwood completely flattened about 115 feet below the surface, with its debris field spread across the seabed. Intentional postwar demolition—likely intended to clear the harbor for navigation—left the ship largely unrecognizable, though the distinct cable-laying machinery was intact.

“While neither Kotohira Maru nor SS Dellwood were directly involved in the Battle of Attu,” the authors wrote, “the presence of both wrecked vessels represents critical aspects of the war effort that extend beyond those three weeks in May 1943.” For instance, in June 1942, Japan captured Attu and neighboring Kiska, displacing the island’s indigenous Unangan people. The Kotohira Maru is now symbolic of the removal of the people, and the SS Dellwood is similarly representative of the military buildup that prevented their return.

“The documentation of these sunken vessels not only sheds light on their final moments,” the authors wrote, “but it can also be used to bring renewed awareness of Alaska’s World War II history and inform cultural resource managers on Attu’s submerged heritage.”

Best Portable Charger Deal

3-Port USB-C Nano Charger

Anker 3-Port USB-C Nano Charger

Now 30% Off

Best Vacuum Deal

V8 Plus Cordless Vacuum

Dyson V8 Plus Cordless Vacuum

Now 35% Off

Best TV Deal

55-inch 4K UHD Smart Fire TV

Best Headphones Deal

WH-1000XM5 Noise Canceling Headphones

Sony WH-1000XM5 Noise Canceling Headphones

Now 30% Off

Best Jump Starter Deal

GT3000 Jump Starter

GOOLOO GT3000 Jump Starter

Now 30% Off

Headshot of Tim Newcomb

Tim Newcomb is a journalist based in the Pacific Northwest. He covers stadiums, sneakers, gear, infrastructure, and more for a variety of publications, including Popular Mechanics. His favorite interviews have included sit-downs with Roger Federer in Switzerland, Kobe Bryant in Los Angeles, and Tinker Hatfield in Portland.