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    Facebook Twitter 新浪微博 google plus Instagram YouTube Monday 5 October 2015
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    Century-old body remains found from warship wreckage

    (Xinhua)    15:52, October 05, 2015
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    (社會)(1)“丹東一號”再次出水一批水下文物

    Photo taken on Oct. 4, 2015 shows items salvaged from the shipwreck to be studied in Dandong, northeast China's Liaoning Province. "Dandong No.1", a shipwreck discovered last year near Dandong Port, has been confirmed as cruiser Zhiyuan, one of the warships of the Beiyang Fleet sunk by the Japanese navy during the first Sino-Japanese War 121 years ago. (Xinhua/Chen Yichen)

    SHENYANG, Oct. 5 (Xinhua) -- At least seven remains of bodies have been found by archeologists from a warship sunken by the Japanese navy during a Sino-Japanese War 121 years ago.

    "We believe the remains belonged to officers and soldiers aboard the warship," said Zhou Chunshui, who leads the exploration mission organized by the State Administration of Cultural Heritage.

    The Zhiyuan Warship, with a 50-meter-long hull, is located about 10 nautical miles southwest of Dandong Port in Northeast China.

    More than 100 pieces of ship parts and belongings of the seamen have also been found, Zhou said.

    "We will study those relics and try to find out what lives at sea were like more than a century ago," he said.

    Coded "Dandong No.1," the 1,600-tonne vessel was one of the four warships of the Qing Dynasty (1616-1911) imperial naval forces -- Beiyang Fleet -- which was defeated in 1894 by the Japanese navy in the Battle of Yellow Sea.

    A total of 252 officers and soldiers were aboard. Only seven survived. The four ships were China's most sophisticated vessels at that time, bigger and better armed than the Japanese ones but slower and short of ammunition.

    Zhou said further investigation is needed to decide whether to lift the ship, whose main structure has remained intact, out of the water.

    History documents recorded that the ship captain Deng Shichang refused to abandon the ship after it was severely damaged. Deng has been described as a patriot in Chinese modern history.


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    (For the latest China news, Please follow People's Daily on Twitter and Facebook)
    (Editor:Yao Chun,Bianji)

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