On 23 June 1968, salvage vessel
Altay discovered the wreck of a submarine at 70°01′23″N 36°35′22″E, at a depth of . The crew inspected the wreck with its
bathyscape and identified it as
S-80. A government commission studied the report and ordered Operation "Depth," the salvage of the wreck. The
Nikolayevsk Shipyard built
Karpaty, a special salvage vessel equipped to raise the sunken submarine. Operation "Depth" was carried out by a task force of the
Northern Fleet consisting of groups of trawlers and a
destroyer under the command of Captain First Rank S. Minchenko. The wreck was lifted from the ocean floor on 9 June 1969 and transported to
Mys Teriberskiy, suspended under
Karpaty in slings. There, it was lowered to the bottom of Zavalishin Harbor at a depth of on 12 July. On 24 July 1969,
S-80 was raised to the surface. During August, a government commission began studying the wreck under the management of
Hero of the Soviet Union Vice Admiral
Grigory Shchedrin. The commission determined not only the immediate causes of the boat's loss, but also that two further errors had compounded the accident: the crew never attempted to shift propulsion to the electric motors, and they never performed an emergency ballast tank blow. == References ==