A
diving support vessel, the MSV
Deepwater 1 (now named
Rockwater 1), started a search for the sunken wreckage at 09:00 the following morning. Sea conditions were rough with strong
tidal currents and a water depth around 90 metres but the wreckage was located. The monohulled
Deepwater 1 struggled to maintain position in the building sea and current conditions. Shell Expro's Multi Services Vessel, the MSV
Stadive, arrived and assumed the role of primary recovery vessel and, being a
semi-submersible, was able to quickly recover the major components of interest. By the evening of 10 November the
cockpit voice recorder, the cockpit section of the fuselage, the rotors and rotor heads, and the gearboxes and associated control systems had been recovered and transferred to the
Deepwater 1, which departed for Aberdeen to pass her cargo onwards for analysis by the
Air Accidents Investigation Branch (AAIB). The
Stadive remained on site and recovered much of the remainder of the fuselage and the bodies of the victims. In all, 44 of the 45 victims' bodies were recovered. ==Cause==