<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss version="2.0"><channel><title>The Cold File / Maritime</title><description>Documented maritime mysteries from The Cold File.</description><link>https://thecoldfile.com/</link><item><title>Victoria Strait, 22 April 1848: the lost Franklin Expedition</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1845-franklin-expedition/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1845-franklin-expedition/</guid><description>A printed Admiralty form in a stone cairn on King William Island records that 105 men abandoned HMS Erebus and HMS Terror on 22 April 1848. None reached help. For 180 years the cumulative cause of their deaths has been contested, even after Inuit oral history guided Parks Canada to the wreck of Erebus in 2014 and the Arctic Research Foundation to Terror in 2016.</description><pubDate>Mon, 15 Jun 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Off the Farallones, 25 March 1921: the loss of USS Conestoga</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1921-uss-conestoga/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1921-uss-conestoga/</guid><description>A 170-foot US Navy ocean tug cleared the Golden Gate in March 1921 and disappeared with all 56 of her crew. The wreck was located in 2009 and identified by NOAA and the Navy in March 2016, ninety-five years almost to the day after she sailed; the cause of her loss remains officially undetermined.</description><pubDate>Tue, 09 Jun 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>North Atlantic, February 1893: the disappearance of the SS Naronic</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1893-ss-naronic/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1893-ss-naronic/</guid><description>A near-new White Star cattle and cargo steamer left Liverpool for New York on 11 February 1893 with 74 souls aboard and was never seen again. The first physical trace was two empty lifeboats sighted by another ship three weeks later. A Board of Trade inquiry could not fix the cause and 132 years on the loss is still unsolved.</description><pubDate>Sat, 06 Jun 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Hurd Deep, 16 April 1951: the loss of HMS Affray</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1951-hms-affray/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1951-hms-affray/</guid><description>A Royal Navy training submarine dived in the English Channel on the evening of 16 April 1951 and never surfaced. A Board of Inquiry identified material failure of her snort mast as the most likely immediate cause. Seven months later the First Lord of the Admiralty told the House of Commons there was insufficient evidence to enable him to say with certainty why Affray was lost. The Director of Naval Construction reportedly disagreed with the Board in private. Seventy-five years on, the Ministry of Defence has not revised that position.</description><pubDate>Wed, 03 Jun 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Easter Sunday 1964, Nyrøysa: An Unmarked Lifeboat at the World&apos;s Most Remote Shore</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1964-bouvet-lifeboat/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1964-bouvet-lifeboat/</guid><description>On 2 April 1964, a Royal Navy helicopter put a survey party from HMS Protector down on a low strip of jumbled rock on the northwest coast of Bouvet Island. About two hundred yards inland, in a small lagoon already occupied by a colony of fur seals, the party found a half-swamped, twenty-foot lifeboat with no markings, no log, and no human remains. On the rocks nearby were a forty-four-gallon drum, a pair of oars, pieces of wood, and a copper buoyancy tank hammered out flat. No vessel of origin has ever been identified in any reputable record. Sixty-two years on, the file is still open.</description><pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Found Drifting 600 Miles Off Course: The MV Joyita, 1955</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1955-mv-joyita/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1955-mv-joyita/</guid><description>A 69-foot wooden cabin cruiser sailed from Apia for the Tokelau Islands on 3 October 1955 with 25 people aboard, missed her destination, and was found five weeks later drifting derelict more than 600 miles west of her route. A New Zealand Crown Commission of Inquiry established how she flooded but declared the fate of the 25 inexplicable on the evidence submitted.</description><pubDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>The SS Marine Sulphur Queen, 39 Lost, Four Scenarios Live</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1963-marine-sulphur-queen/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1963-marine-sulphur-queen/</guid><description>A T-2 tanker converted to carry molten sulfur sailed from Beaumont in February 1963 and vanished in the Gulf of Mexico west of the Florida Keys with all thirty-nine crew. The US Coast Guard&apos;s Marine Board could not determine the cause and listed four possible scenarios it declined to rank. Eight years later, the Second Circuit found the vessel unseaworthy but denied punitive damages on the ground that no one knows how the ship was lost.</description><pubDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Two Pieces on the Abyssal Plain: The Loss of USS Scorpion, 1968</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1968-uss-scorpion/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1968-uss-scorpion/</guid><description>A US Navy nuclear attack submarine was lost with all 99 crew in deep water southwest of the Azores in May 1968. The Navy&apos;s own Court of Inquiry concluded the certain cause could not be ascertained, a separate Navy engineering panel reached a different conclusion, and fifty-seven years later the responsible bodies still do not agree on which failure killed her.</description><pubDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Twenty Metres Above the Waterline: The Loss of MV München, 1978</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1978-mv-munchen/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1978-mv-munchen/</guid><description>A modern West German LASH carrier vanished in an exceptional North Atlantic storm in December 1978, leaving only fragmentary distress signals, scattered debris, and a starboard lifeboat whose davit pins had been bent fore to aft some twenty metres above her waterline. The storm broke her. The specific mechanism that destroyed her so quickly is what the Seeamt Bremerhaven could not establish, and what the case is still about.</description><pubDate>Thu, 28 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>The Liner That Never Reached Cape Town: SS Waratah, 1909</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1909-ss-waratah/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1909-ss-waratah/</guid><description>A year-old Blue Anchor liner left Durban for Cape Town in July 1909 with 211 people aboard, was last seen by another ship the next morning, and vanished in a gale with no wreckage, no bodies, and, to this day, no confirmed wreck. A 14-month British inquiry could not fix the cause. The central question of whether she was dangerously unstable was contested at that inquiry, and more than a century of searches has found nothing.</description><pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Holding Our Own: The Sinking of the Edmund Fitzgerald, 1975</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1975-edmund-fitzgerald/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1975-edmund-fitzgerald/</guid><description>The largest ship on the Great Lakes vanished from a companion vessel&apos;s radar in under ten minutes, with no distress call, on a November night in 1975. The storm sank her. Which failure delivered the killing blow is the part three official investigations could never agree on.</description><pubDate>Tue, 26 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Vanished With All Hands: USS Cyclops, 1918</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1918-uss-cyclops/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1918-uss-cyclops/</guid><description>A 540-foot Navy collier with about 300 people aboard left Barbados for Baltimore in March 1918 and was never seen again, the largest non-combat loss of life in United States Navy history. The official cause is still unknown. The leading engineering explanation lies in the dense manganese ore she carried, and in two sister ships later lost the same way, while the wartime treachery suspicions and the Bermuda Triangle framing are things the record does not support.</description><pubDate>Mon, 25 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>Found Under Full Sail: The Carroll A. Deering, 1921</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1921-carroll-deering/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1921-carroll-deering/</guid><description>A near-new five-masted schooner was found hard aground on Diamond Shoals with every sail set, both lifeboats gone, her steering smashed, and her crew of about eleven never seen again. Here the eerie details are mostly real, recorded by the Coast Guard and a five-department federal investigation. The certainty of a pirate capture rested on a confessed hoax, and the Bermuda Triangle is a later overlay on a 1921 event.</description><pubDate>Mon, 25 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item><item><title>A Sound Ship, Abandoned: The Mary Celeste, 1872</title><link>https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1872-mary-celeste/</link><guid isPermaLink="true">https://thecoldfile.com/articles/1872-mary-celeste/</guid><description>A seaworthy American brigantine was found adrift east of the Azores with her one boat gone and ten people missing. The famous version, with its warm breakfast and untouched coffee, is fiction. The documented case is stranger, and harder to close.</description><pubDate>Sun, 24 May 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate></item></channel></rss>