King William Island excavations (1981–1982) In June 1981,
Owen Beattie, a professor of
anthropology at the
University of Alberta, began the 1845–1848 Franklin Expedition Forensic Anthropology Project (FEFAP) when he and his team of researchers and field assistants travelled from
Edmonton to King William Island, traversing the island's western coast as Franklin's men did 132 years before. FEFAP hoped to find artefacts and skeletal remains in order to use modern
forensics to establish identities and causes of death among the lost 129 crewmembers. Although the trek found archaeological artefacts related to 19th-century Europeans and undisturbed
disarticulated human remains, Beattie was disappointed that more remains were not found. Examining the bones of Franklin crewmen, he noted areas of pitting and scaling often found in cases of
vitamin C deficiency, the cause of
scurvy. After returning to Edmonton, he compared notes from the survey with James Savelle, an Arctic archaeologist, and noticed skeletal patterns suggesting cannibalism. Seeking information about the Franklin crew's health and diet, he sent bone samples to the Alberta Soil and Feed Testing Laboratory for
trace element analysis and assembled another team to visit King William Island. The analysis would find an unexpected level of 226
parts per million (ppm) of lead in the crewman's bones, which was ten times higher than the
control samples, taken from Inuit skeletons from the same geographic area, of 26–36 ppm. In June 1982, a team made up of Beattie and three students (Walt Kowall, a graduate student in anthropology at the University of Alberta; Arne Carlson, an
archaeology and
geography student from
Simon Fraser University in
British Columbia; and Arsien Tungilik, an Inuk student and field assistant) was flown to the west coast of King William Island where they retraced some of the steps of McClintock in 1859 and Schwatka in 1878–79. Discoveries during this expedition included the remains of between 6 and 14 men in the vicinity of McClintock's "boat place" and artefacts including a complete boot sole fitted with makeshift cleats for better traction.
Beechey Island excavations and exhumations (1984–1986) After returning to Edmonton in 1982 and learning of the lead level findings from the 1981 expedition, Beattie struggled to find a cause. Possibilities included the lead solder used to seal the expedition's food tins, other food containers lined with lead foil,
food colouring,
tobacco products,
pewter tableware, and lead-
wicked candles. He came to suspect that the problems of lead poisoning compounded by the effects of scurvy could have been lethal for the Franklin crew. Because skeletal lead might reflect lifetime exposure rather than exposure limited to the voyage, Beattie's theory could be tested only by forensic examination of preserved soft tissue as opposed to bone. Beattie decided to examine the graves of the buried crewmen on Beechey Island. After obtaining legal permission, Beattie's team visited Beechey Island in August 1984 to perform
autopsies on the three crewmen buried there. They started with John Torrington, the first crew member to die. After completing Torrington's autopsy and exhuming and briefly examining the body of John Hartnell, the team, pressed for time and threatened by weather, returned to Edmonton with tissue and bone samples. Trace element analysis of Torrington's bones and hair indicated that the crewman "would have suffered severe mental and physical problems caused by lead poisoning". Although the autopsy indicated that
pneumonia had been the ultimate cause of the crewman's death, lead poisoning was cited as a contributing factor. During the expedition, the team visited a place about north of the gravesite to examine fragments of hundreds of food tins discarded by Franklin's men. Beattie noted that the seams were poorly soldered with lead, which had likely come in direct contact with the food. The release of findings from the 1984 expedition and the photo of Torrington, a 138-year-old corpse well preserved by Arctic
permafrost, led to wide media coverage and renewed interest in the Franklin expedition. Subsequent research has suggested that another potential source for the lead may have been the ships'
distilled water systems rather than the tinned food. K. T. H. Farrer argued that "it is impossible to see how one could ingest from the canned food the amount of lead, 3.3 mg per day over eight months, required to raise the PbB to the level 80 μg/dL at which symptoms of lead poisoning begin to appear in adults and the suggestion that bone lead in adults could be 'swamped' by lead ingested from food over a period of a few months, or even three years, seems scarcely tenable." In addition, tinned food was in widespread use within the Royal Navy at that time and its use did not lead to any significant increase in lead poisoning elsewhere. Uniquely for this expedition, the ships were fitted with converted railway locomotive engines for auxiliary propulsion which required an estimated one tonne of fresh water per hour when steaming. It is highly probable that it was for this reason that the ships were fitted with a unique
desalination system which, given the materials in use at the time, would have produced large quantities of water with a very high lead content. William Battersby has argued that this is a much more likely source for the high levels of lead observed in the remains of expedition members than the tinned food. Under difficult field conditions, Derek Notman, a
radiologist and medical doctor from the
University of Minnesota, and radiology technician Larry Anderson took many
X-rays of the crewmen prior to autopsy. Barbara Schweger, an
Arctic clothing specialist, and Roger Amy, a
pathologist, assisted in the investigation. Beattie and his team had noticed that someone else had attempted to exhume Hartnell. In the effort, a
pickaxe had damaged the wooden lid of his coffin, and the coffin plaque was missing. Research in Edmonton later showed that Sir Edward Belcher, commander of one of the Franklin rescue expeditions, had ordered the exhumation of Hartnell in October 1852, but was thwarted by the permafrost. One month later,
Edward A. Inglefield, commander of another rescue expedition, succeeded with the exhumation and removed the coffin's plaque. Unlike Hartnell's grave, the grave of Private William Braine was largely intact. When he was exhumed, the survey team saw signs that his burial had been hasty. His arms, body and head had not been positioned carefully in the coffin, and one of his undershirts had been put on backwards. The coffin seemed too small for him; its lid had pressed down on his nose. A large copper plaque with his name and other personal data punched into it adorned his coffin lid. File: 2018-09-30 01 Franklin Camp grave images, Nunavut Canada 2015-09-11.jpg|The four graves at Franklin Camp near the harbour on
Beechey Island,
Nunavut, Canada File:2018-09-30 02 Franklin Camp grave images, Nunavut Canada 2015-09-11.jpg|(L–R) Three grave stones commemorate
John Torrington,
William Braine and
John Hartnell of the Franklin Expedition. A fourth headstone marks the grave of a sailor named Thomas Morgan who came later in a Franklin search expedition and died at the camp.
NgLj-2 excavations (1992) In 1992, Franklin scholar Barry Ranford and his colleague, Mike Yarascavitch, discovered human skeletal remains and artefacts of what they suspected to be some of the lost crewmen of the expedition. The site matches the physical description of McClintock's "boat place". In 1993, a team of archaeologists and
forensic anthropologists returned to the site, which they referenced as "NgLj-2", on the western shores of King William Island, to excavate these remains. These excavations uncovered nearly 400 bones and bone fragments, and physical artefacts ranging from pieces of clay pipes to buttons and brass fittings. Examination of these bones by
Anne Keenleyside, the expedition's forensic scientist, showed elevated levels of lead and many cut-marks "consistent with de-fleshing". On the basis of this expedition, it has become generally accepted that at least some of Franklin's men resorted to cannibalism in their final distress. Later reviews of the data concluded that NgLj-2, although in the vicinity of McClintock's boat place, was likely a different site and that NgLj-2 and NgLj-3, both locations at Erebus bay documented by the 1992 expedition, were likely separate sites where boats on sleds ended up after the Franklin expedition's crew tried to reach Back River, while NgLj-1 was likely not the location of a boat due to the small numbers of fragments found there. Stanton and Park (2017) consider LgLj-3 to be identical with McClintock's boat place. The conclusion was supported by an analysis of buried human remains at LgLj-3 that the authors found to match the description of two bodies found by McClintock in the then intact boat. LgLj-8, another site documented in 1992, was classified as a place where artefacts from the Franklin expedition were likely brought to by Inuit who salvaged the equipment left by the Franklin expedition.
King William Island (1994–1995) In 1994, Woodman organised and led a land search of the area from Collinson Inlet to (modern) Victory Point in search of the buried "vaults" spoken of in the testimony of the contemporary Inuk hunter Sŭ-pung-er. A ten-person team spent ten days in the search, sponsored by the
Royal Canadian Geographical Society and filmed by the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC). No trace of the vaults was found. In 1995, an expedition was jointly organised by Woodman, George Hobson and American adventurer Steven Trafton with each party planning a separate search. Trafton's group travelled to the
Clarence Islands to investigate Inuit stories of a "white man's cairn" there but found nothing. Hobson's party, accompanied by archaeologist Margaret Bertulli, investigated the "summer camp" found a few miles to the south of Cape Felix, where some minor Franklin relics were found. Woodman, with two companions, travelled south from Wall Bay to Victory Point and investigated all likely campsites along this coast, finding only some rusted cans at a previously unknown campsite near Cape Maria Louisa.
Wreck searches (1997–2013) In 1997, a "Franklin 150" expedition was mounted by the Canadian film company Eco-Nova to use
sonar to investigate more of the priority magnetic targets found in 1992. The senior archaeologist was
Robert Grenier (archaeologist), assisted by Margaret Bertulli, and Woodman again acted as expedition historian and search coordinator. Operations were conducted from the
Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker Laurier. Approximately were surveyed, without result, near
Kirkwall Island. When detached parties found Franklin relics – primarily copper sheeting and small items – on the beaches of
islets to the north of
O'Reilly Island the search was diverted to that area, but poor weather prevented significant survey work before the expedition ended. A documentary,
Oceans of Mystery: Search for the Lost Fleet, was produced by Eco-Nova about this expedition. Three expeditions were mounted by Woodman to continue the magnetometer mapping of the proposed wreck sites: a privately sponsored expedition in 2001, and the Irish-Canadian Franklin Search Expeditions of 2002 and 2004. These made use of sled-drawn magnetometers working on the sea ice and completed the unfinished survey of the northern (Kirkwall Island) search area in 2001, and the entire southern O'Reilly Island area in 2002 and 2004. All of the high-priority magnetic targets were identified by sonar through the ice as geological in origin. In 2002 and 2004, small Franklin artefacts and characteristic explorer tent sites were found on a small islet northeast of O'Reilly Island during shore searches. In August 2008 a new search by
Parks Canada was announced, to be led by Grenier. This search hoped to take advantage of the improved ice conditions, using
side-scan sonar from a boat in open water. Grenier also hoped to draw from newly published Inuit testimony collected by oral historian
Dorothy Harley Eber. Some of Eber's informants placed the location of one of Franklin's ships in the vicinity of the
Royal Geographical Society Island, an area not searched by previous expeditions. The search was to also include local Inuk historian Louie Kamookak, who had found other significant remains of the expedition and would represent the indigenous culture. HMS
Investigator became icebound in 1853 while searching for Franklin's expedition and was subsequently abandoned. It was found in shallow water in
Mercy Bay on 25 July 2010, along the northern coast of
Banks Island in Canada's western Arctic. The Parks Canada team reported that it was in good shape, upright in about of water. A new search was announced by Parks Canada in August 2013.
Victoria Strait Expedition: wreck of Erebus (2014) images of
Erebus at the bottom of
Wilmot and Crampton Bay, September 2014 On 1 September 2014, a larger search by a Canadian team under the banner of the "Victoria Strait Expedition" found two items on
Hat Island in the Queen Maud Gulf near King William Island: a wooden object, possibly a plug for a deck
hawse, the iron pipe through which the ship's chain cable would descend into the chain locker below; and part of a boat-launching
davit bearing the stamps of two Royal Navy broad arrows. On 9 September 2014, the expedition announced that on 7 September it had located one of Franklin's two ships. The ship is preserved in good condition, with side-scan sonar picking up even the deck planking. The wreck lies in about of water at the bottom of
Wilmot and Crampton Bay in the eastern part of Queen Maud Gulf, west of O'Reilly Island. On 1 October at the
House of Commons,
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper confirmed the wreck was that of HMS
Erebus. A documentary,
Hunt for the Arctic Ghost Ship, was produced by Lion Television for
Channel 4's
Secret History series in 2015. In September 2018, Parks Canada announced that
Erebus had deteriorated significantly. "An upwards buoyant force acting on the decking combined with storm swell in relatively shallow water caused the displacement", according to a spokesperson. The underwater exploration in 2018 totalled only a day and a half due to weather and ice conditions and was to continue in 2019. Also in September 2018, a report provided specifics as to ownership of the ships and contents: the United Kingdom will own the first 65 artefacts brought up from
Erebus, while the wreck of both ships and other artefacts will be jointly owned by Canada and the Inuit.
Arctic Research Foundation Expedition: wreck of Terror (2016) On 12 September 2016, it was announced that the
Arctic Research Foundation expedition had found the wreck of HMS
Terror to the south of King William Island in Terror Bay, at at a depth of , and in "pristine" condition. In 2018, a team examined the wreck of
Terror using a
remotely operated underwater vehicle (ROV) that collected photos and video clips of the ship and a number of artefacts. The group concluded that
Terror had not been left at anchor, since anchor cables were seen to be secured along the bulwarks. ==Scientific conclusions==