-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
Deutsche Bank logs record profits, as new probe casts shadow
-
Vietnam and EU upgrade ties as EU chief visits Hanoi
-
Hongkongers snap up silver as gold becomes 'too expensive'
-
Gold soars past $5,500 as Trump sabre rattles over Iran
-
Samsung logs best-ever profit on AI chip demand
-
China's ambassador warns Australia on buyback of key port
-
As US tensions churn, new generation of protest singers meet the moment
-
Venezuelans eye economic revival with hoped-for oil resurgence
-
Samsung Electronics posts record profit on AI demand
-
French Senate adopts bill to return colonial-era art
-
Tesla profits tumble on lower EV sales, AI spending surge
-
Meta shares jump on strong earnings report
-
Anti-immigration protesters force climbdown in Sundance documentary
-
Springsteen releases fiery ode to Minneapolis shooting victims
-
SpaceX eyes IPO timed to planet alignment and Musk birthday: report
-
Neil Young gifts music to Greenland residents for stress relief
-
Fear in Sicilian town as vast landslide risks widening
-
King Charles III warns world 'going backwards' in climate fight
-
Court orders Dutch to protect Caribbean island from climate change
-
Rules-based trade with US is 'over': Canada central bank head
-
Holocaust survivor urges German MPs to tackle resurgent antisemitism
-
'Extraordinary' trove of ancient species found in China quarry
-
Google unveils AI tool probing mysteries of human genome
-
UK proposes to let websites refuse Google AI search
-
Trump says 'time running out' as Iran threatens tough response
-
Germany cuts growth forecast as recovery slower than hoped
-
Amazon to cut 16,000 jobs worldwide
-
Greenland dispute is 'wake-up call' for Europe: Macron
-
Dollar halts descent, gold keeps climbing before Fed update
-
Sweden plans to ban mobile phones in schools
-
Deutsche Bank offices searched in money laundering probe
-
Susan Sarandon to be honoured at Spain's top film awards
-
Trump says 'time running out' as Iran rejects talks amid 'threats'
-
Spain eyes full service on train tragedy line in 10 days
-
Greenland dispute 'strategic wake-up call for all of Europe,' says Macron
-
SKorean chip giant SK hynix posts record operating profit for 2025
-
Greenland's elite dogsled unit patrols desolate, icy Arctic
-
Uganda's Quidditch players with global dreams
-
'Hard to survive': Kyiv's elderly shiver after Russian attacks on power and heat
-
Polish migrants return home to a changed country
-
Dutch tech giant ASML posts bumper profits, eyes bright AI future
-
Minnesota congresswoman unbowed after attacked with liquid
-
Backlash as Australia kills dingoes after backpacker death
-
Omar attacked in Minneapolis after Trump vows to 'de-escalate'
-
Dollar struggles to recover from losses after Trump comments
-
Greenland blues to Delhi red carpet: EU finds solace in India
-
French ex-senator found guilty of drugging lawmaker
-
US Fed set to pause rate cuts as it defies Trump pressure
-
Trump says will 'de-escalate' in Minneapolis after shooting backlash
Wreck of British explorer James Cook's Endeavour found: researchers
The wreck of Captain James Cook's famed vessel the Endeavour has been found off the coast of the US state of Rhode Island, Australian researchers said Thursday.
Their research partners in the United States, however, have described the announcement as premature.
The Endeavour, which the British explorer sailed in an historic voyage to Australia and New Zealand between 1768 and 1771, was scuttled in Newport Harbour during the American War of Independence.
For more than two centuries, it lay forgotten.
"Since 1999, we have been investigating several 18th-century shipwrecks in a two-square-mile area where we believed that Endeavour sank," Kevin Sumption, director of the Australian National Maritime Museum, told a Thursday media briefing.
"Based on archival and archaeological evidence, I'm convinced it's the Endeavour."
But the Rhode Island Marine Archaeology Project said it was too early to draw that conclusion.
In a statement, project executive director DK Abbass said the announcement was a "breach of contract", adding that "conclusions will be driven by proper scientific process and not Australian emotions or politics".
A spokesperson for the Australian museum said Abbass was "entitled to her own opinion regarding the vast amount of evidence we have accumulated."
The museum does not believe it is in breach of any contracts.
Sumption was among a team of archaeologists that announced in 2018 they believed the Endeavour's remains were at the Rhode Island site, but said then more analysis had to be done.
The Endeavour was the ship Cook sailed from England to Tahiti and then New Zealand before reaching Australia in 1770 and charting the continent's east coast.
By the time the ship sank in Newport Harbor in August 1778, it had been renamed the Lord Sandwich and was being used by the British to hold prisoners of war during the American revolution.
The British scuttled the ship, along with others, to block a French fleet from sailing into Newport Harbour to support the Americans.
This was just a few months before Cook's death in Hawaii in February 1779.
After two centuries at the bottom of the harbour, only about 15 percent of the Endeavour remains intact, according to the Australian National Maritime Museum.
"The focus is now on what can be done to protect and preserve it," Sumption said Thursday.
L.Peeters--CPN