1966 H-bomb recovery In the
Palomares incident of 17 January 1966, a
hydrogen bomb was lost in the Mediterranean Sea when a
B-52 bomber collided with a
KC-135 tanker near
Palomares, Spain. The bomb was located, at a depth of , by the
United States Navy submersible
DSV Alvin after a 2½ month search. After
Alvin was unsuccessful in recovering the bomb, the Navy brought in CURV-I. CURV-I was successful in attaching
grapnels to the bomb but became entangled in the bomb's parachute lines. The entangled bomb, parachute, and CURV-I were successfully raised together to the surface 81 days after the original incident.
1973 Pisces III rescue Pisces III, a Canadian commercial submersible, was used to lay
transatlantic telephone cable on the sea bottom off Ireland in 1973. When a buoyancy tank was inadvertently flooded, it sank to the bottom of the ocean with its two-man crew, Britons
Roger Mallinson and Roger Chapman, stranded at a depth of and 72 hours of available life support, which they were able to extend to 76 hours by careful conservation. Initial rescue efforts by
Pisces III sister submersibles were unsuccessful. Through an international effort of the
United States, Canada, and
England, CURV-III was deployed within 24 hours 6,000 miles from its home base. Although operators of CURV-III were fully prepared to recover bodies during the survey, they did not locate any of the 29-man crew. An independent researcher was contracted to review the survey results and produce the sketches of the wreck used in the
United States Coast Guard and
National Transportation Safety Board investigation reports.
2023 Missing submersible incident CURV-21, which can reach 20,000 feet below the surface of water was being used to search for
OceanGate submersible named
Titan. ==References==