Scientists explore sunken mini sub near Pearl Harbor
ANCHORAGE, Alaska — Ocean waters are taking a toll on a sunken mini submarine 5 miles off the entrance to Pearl Harbor.
The Japanese Imperial Navy vessel with a two-man crew — the first casualties of shots fired by U.S. forces in World War II — lies at 1,100 feet. The hull, a host for barnacles and coral, is coming apart in three places.
An underwater remote vehicle operated from the Okeanos Explorer, a ship of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, viewed the sub Wednesday 75 years to the minute after it was struck by a shell from a Navy destroyer, the USS Ward. The location is maintained as a gravesite, said Hans Van Tilburg, a historian with NOAA’s Office of National Marine Sanctuaries.
Visiting the site and livestreaming images at the precise moment it was struck raises awareness of the attack on defences at Oahu, Van Tilburg said.

