On the 15 August 2008,
Parks Canada, an agency of the
Government of Canada, announced a
Can$ 75,000 six-week search deploying the
icebreaker , with the goals of finding the ships and reinforcing Canada's claims regarding
sovereignty over large portions of the Arctic. ,
Gjoa Haven, 2019 The wreckage of one of Franklin's ships was found on 2 September 2014 by a Parks Canada team led by Ryan Harris and Marc-André Bernier. Recovery of the
ship's bell was announced on 6 November 2014. On 4 March 2015, it was announced that a diving expedition on
Erebus, by Parks Canada and
Royal Canadian Navy divers, would begin in April. Although the exact location was not released, Nancy Anilniliak, the Field Unit Superintendent of the Nunavut Field Unit, has restricted access to a square area in Wilmot and Crampton Bay, to the west of the
Adelaide Peninsula. The area runs from Point A () to Point B () to Point C () to Point D (). On 12 September 2016, it was announced that the wreck of HMS
Terror had been found submerged in Terror Bay, off the south-west coast of King William Island. The wrecks are designated a
National Historic Site of Canada with the precise location of the designation in abeyance. On 23 October 2017, British
Defence Minister Sir
Michael Fallon announced that the United Kingdom would transfer the ownership of both ships to Canada, retaining only a few relics and any gold, along with the right to repatriate any human remains. In September 2018, Parks Canada announced that
Erebus condition had deteriorated significantly, with a section of the upper deck detaching from the ship, flipping over, and moving towards the stern. Parks Canada attributed the deterioration to "an upwards buoyant force acting on the decking combined with storm swell in relatively shallow water". It was then confirmed that the United Kingdom will own the first 65 artifacts brought up from
Erebus while the wrecks of both ships and other artifacts will be owned by Canada and the Inuit. Taking advantage of "sublime" weather conditions in the summer of 2019, Parks Canada were able to recover a number of artifacts from
Erebus, namely personal items belonging to members of the crew, which were unveiled at Parks Canada's conservation lab in Ottawa in February 2020. The planned exploration of the wreck sites in 2020 was cancelled due to the
COVID-19 pandemic, with access to the wrecks restricted to the Inuit Guardians keeping watch on the sites and for those with harvesting rights in the surrounding waters. Underwater archaeology team leader Marc-Andre Bernier remarked that Parks Canada was "concerned about
Erebus", given the wreck's shallower depths and the earlier reports of damage. Parks Canada's Underwater Archaeology Team returned to the wrecks in May 2022, after a two-year postponement caused by the pandemic; particular attention would be paid to any further damage to
Erebus, due to her shallower depths. Recovered from
Erebus during the 2022 season were 275 items, most prominently a leather-bound folio discovered in the steward's pantry. The Parks Canada team has expressed the hope that deciphering its contents, whatever they might be, may bode well for future discoveries of written materials from both ships. == Public access ==