Friday, 27 January 2023

ANALYSIS OF WRECKAGE DISTRIBUTION.

Wreckage was first discovered in the form of two copper air tanks (from lifeboat(s)) on North Turtle Island, 25 March, by Mr. Daniels of lugger Gloria Violet. The majority of wreckage was discovered between 2 and 5 April, a fortnight after the disaster. The final discovery during this time frame, also copper air tanks from lifeboat(s), mid April, is outlined in the following report: 


The West Australian, 17 April, 1912.

THE KOOMBANA.
A STATIONOWNER'S REPORT.

Mr. W. E. Moxon, manager of the 
Adelaide Steamship Company, received 
information yesterday to the effect that a Mr.
Thompson, a station-owner in the North
West, had reported that some of his natives
had picked up three copper air tanks, which
had evidently come from one of the life
boats of the Koombana. The tanks were
found on the sandy beach connecting 
Solitary Island with the mainland, slightly to
the north of Amphinome Shoals.

Three sets of air tanks, originating from the wrecked Koombana's lifeboats, were discovered close to the coast, comprising 3 widely spaced (100 miles) geographic locations:

13. North Turtle island
14. Solitary Island. 
15. 14 miles south of Port Hedland 

There is no specific pattern apart from the air tanks having been subjected to the "set-in of the tide" -  Captain Clark, formerly Chief Officer of the Koombana:


"the wreckage had been borne landwards 
by the set-in of the tide, which always 
followed on a severe blow in the
Fix this textnorth-west."

One might anticipate such an outcome given the buoyancy factor associated with air tanks and variable surface wind forces.






Alternatively the Solitary Island discovery could point to what drover Olive saw on the night of 20 March.

Daily Commercial News, 14 May, 1912

The company had received a report 
from a magistrate at Broome that a 
statement had been made by a drover 
named Olive, that on the night of March 
20, when he was at Boyer's Camp, 30 
miles north of Condon, at about 8 or 9 p.m. 
he saw two rockets go up in the direction of
N.W. There was a hurricane blowing at 
the time. 

From a position on low cliffs roughly 46 ft. above sea level, he claimed to have seen two rockets in the direction of the northwest. Veracity of this account depends on reasonable visibility and the rockets rising to a significant altitude.

It is possible that at least one lifeboat got away safely from the sinking Koombana and these rockets were fired from it, which might explain why copper air tanks from such a lifeboat ended up at Solitary Island; a direction contrary to the sites of the other two sets of air tanks. 

Could it have been Koombana in the position of the two rockets rather than  a lifeboat ?

The vicinity of the rockets is riddled with shoals, notably the Amphinome Shoals and is relatively shallow. If Koombana grounded or foundered in the vicinity, surely the wreck would then have been readily discovered by fishermen, spear fishermen and pearl divers through the decades?

The distribution of the bulk of wreckage does not favour this site, particularly with the set-in of the tide referred to. (see second image and discussion below).

Against the veracity of drover Olive's account is the fact that during the night of 20 March and thereafter, the 'hurricane' was to the south of Port Hedland, not north. 




Let us return to the distribution pattern of the bulk of wreckage discovered.

Important to note that wreckage was found in close proximity to the Upjohn coordinates for the oil patch:

Daily Commercial News and Shipping List (Sydney) 14 May 1912.

They had taken the specimens produced 
in Court at this spot. An awning spar and
one of the planks exhibited in Court had
also been discovered in close proximity.
Other articles were picked up about 20
miles from that spot (marked 2 and 3
on graphic below).


27.5 miles represents 30 fathoms, 20 miles from wreckage 2;3.


1. Stateroom door; painting stage; small pieces of board. SS Gorgon  
19 10 S, 119 06 E
2. Motor launch starboard bow plank (with insignia). SS Bullarra   
19 15 S, 119 06 E
3. Small wreckage; (life) boat tanks; lifebelts; panel from saloon / smoke room ceiling. SS Bullarra
(see: https://koombanarevisited.blogspot.com/2019/11/sufficient-warning.html
19 15 S, 119 06 E
4. Bottom board from (life) boat; white painted board. Lugger McLennan.  
19 22 S, 119 05 E 
5. (life) boat mast and small wreckage (rising from bottom). SS Una   
19 07 S, 118 53 E
6. Miscellaneous wreckage. SS Una  
25 miles NW Bedout Island. 
7. Miscellaneous wreckage. SS Una.  
28 miles NW Bedout Island.
8. Cabin paneling. Lugger Mina.  
19 30 S, 118 55 E
9. Smoking room cushion; cabin door. SS Minderoo.  
19 36 S, 117 53 E 
10. Straw envelopes (Leech's fortune). SS Minderoo and SS Gorgon.  
55 miles NNW Port Hedland.
(see:  https://koombanarevisited.blogspot.com/2019/11/sufficient-warning.html)
11. Bottom boards (lifeboat); drawer; small teak panel. SS Minderoo.  
19 32 E, 118 09 S


North of Bedout Island the prevailing current generally flows in a westward direction - Holloway Current (100m).


By my deduction, the distinct cluster of wreckage drifted from east to west and it is suggested that the starting point was somewhere in the vicinity of Captain Upjohn's oil patch coordinates - the site of the wreck of RMS Koombana, further substantiated by the above report reference to a spar awning and one of the planks found in close proximity to the oil patch.

In this instance, the heavier, waterlogged items do not appear to have been significantly influenced by variable, prevailing winds, as were the light and buoyant air tanks.



note extent of Balla Balla cyclone


Long after the disaster, discoveries were still made:

12. Submerged bilge section 150-200 ft.. SS Bullarra, mid July, 1912.  
20 10 S, 118 03 E
16. Saloon seat and ladder. Schooner Queenie Alice, July, 1913. 
Between Forestier and Depuch Islands.
17. Second stateroom door. Pearler, Sholl Island, 1930's.

It is clear from this pattern that over time wreckage drifted inshore, further down the coast (not up the coast).


The Sun, Kalgoorlie, 31 March, 1912.

TELEGRAMS
THE UNSUCCESSFUL 
SEARCH

PERTH, Saturday.
Five steamers have been searching
all the week for signs of the missing
steamer Koombana, have discovered 
no trace. Turtle Islands, Bedout Island 
and Ninety-Mile beach have all been 
carefully examined without success. 
The steamer Minderoo, which left Onslow
for Cossack on Thursday last is now 18
hours overdue. Some optimistic people
regard this as hopeful, thinking she may 
have the missing steamer in tow, but the 
general feeling now is that the Koombana
went down during the recent cyclone. The 
search is being still continued.

The report emphasizes that during the initial two weeks after the disaster, no wreckage was discovered. This suggests that wreckage was released after some delay from the sunken wreck rather than immediately due to battering hurricane-force winds. 

The following extract illustrates the Pilbara current trend associated with Western Australia cyclonic events such as the Balla Balla Blow:  

'alongshore propagating cyclones are responsible for simultaneously generating both strong wave‐induced sediment re-suspension events and significant southwestward subtidal currents. Over the 2 year study period, two particular cyclones (Iggy and Narelle) dominated the sediment fluxes resulting in a residual southwestward sediment transport over the southern part of the shelf. By analyzing results from a long‐term (37 year) wind and wave hind cast, our results suggest that at least 16 tropical cyclones had a strong potential to contribute to that southwestward sediment pathway in a similar way to Iggy and Narelle.'

https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/2017JC013518

11 March, 2021, cyclone Seroja devastated Kalbarri, Western Australia. 

To support my assumption that the bulk of Koombana wreckage drifted generally westward (west-southwestward in some cases) from an assumed starting point of the Upjohn oil patch, I looked at daily surface currents data for the Pilbara to correlate with a post-cyclone model for time of year, such as that outlined above.

The following images document this data as per dates reported.


17 April, almost 1 week after cyclone Seroja: -

Port Hedland is located halfway between 118 E and 119 E.
Bedout Island, 35 miles south of the 19 S line, is roughly where the 'LL's' of Wallal appear on the graphic.

Generally, the currents trend westward and southwestward.
There are no indications of an eastward trend except for a single outlier in latitude 19 S, well beyond the range of Koombana wreckage coordinates.




17 April, zooming in: -

The current trend between Port Hedland and Bedout Island is unambiguously westward.

(Bedout Island is roughly where the  'LL's' of Wallal are marked on the graphic)




19 April: -

The same pattern persists, the area directly north of Bedout Island demonstrating a clearly southwestward trend.

No indication of an eastward current trend.






20 April: -

The southwestward trend north of Bedout Island remains unchanged.




21 April: -

The consistent, westward trend supports my initial assumption that Koombana wreckage drifted uniformly from east to west.




23 April: -

Unchanged.



24 April: -

Unchanged.


26 April: -

15 days post Cyclone Seroja, the current trend both north and south of Bedout Island is consistently westward. 



3 May: -

In fact, 22 days post cyclone Seroja, the trend remains unaltered!!



'Captain Mills, of the steamer Minderoo, 

is inclined to the belief that the ship was 

lost in the vicinity of Bedout Island.'

 


Captain Mills picked up the smoking room cushion, among other items, some 55 miles to the west of Bedout Island. His contention that Koombana lay in the vicinity of Bedout Island confirmed the fact that the current carrying the wreckage trended southwestward.


The following extract (one of many period experiments conducted) illustrates the significance of prevailing currents' relationship with drifting objects. The distances in this extract are roughly 3,000 and 1,150 miles respectively; the prevailing current in question being the Southern Ocean Circumpolar Current from west to east:

 

Daily Telegraph, 19 January, 1911.

BOTTLES FROM THE PERICLES
HOBART, Wednesday. — Fishermen have
picked up two bottles containing current charts,
which on December 26 and 31, 1908, were thrown
overboard from the steamer Pericles, which was
wrecked off the West Australian coast. A peculiar 
feature about the find is that the bottles were thrown 
overboard with an interval of five days between each 
and they were found within five or six miles of each 
other on the South Tasmanian coast.












Thanks to Annie Boyd for contributing to wreckage data.



courtesy Trove; Google Earth and:

COORDINATES CONCLUSION.

I believe Koombana lies somewhere within the illustrated radius from central, given coordinates.


Oil patches were used to localise steamer wrecks.

An example is the Clan Ranald:

https://waratahrevisited.blogspot.com/2016/03/clan-ranald-fascinating-account-and.html

"direct me to the spot where the wreck was sunk, 
which he said he knew exactly, having seen 
streams of oil rising from her."


Daily Commercial News, 14 May, 1912.

Going back to the question of the
search for the Koombana the witness
(captain Upjohn) remarked that in 
latitude 19.11, longitude 119.25, about 
27 to 37 miles from Bedout Island, one 
evening they saw what looked like a 
portion of the deck of a vessel, but it 
proved to be the shape of a ship outlined 
by an oily substance such as would rise 
from a sunken vessel, floating on the sea.


I firmly believe that the above oil patch represented the final resting place of RMS Koombana. Of course the difficulty has been working out exactly where that spot is. There are many examples of historical coordinates notorious for inaccuracies.

Captain Upjohn, according to this press report, was unsure of this exact position, quoting a huge range of 10 miles; 27 - 37 miles.

The 1864 James Martin chart showed a 10.5 mile deviation between the true and charted positions of Bedout Island (see image), which approximates captain Upjohn's 10 mile uncertainty. 

This phenomenon, in part, could be due to:

 "a number of highly magnetic undersea iron ore bodies."

"These ore bodies are of such magnitude that when the survey vessel HMS Penguin reexamined 19th-century survey reports from HMS Meda, it experienced compass variation of up to 55° and dip to 33° (Lecky, 1920: 30)."

(The Searches for SS Koombana, Kerry Thom) 





There is a different way of looking at this conundrum and an important correction to be made.

Captain Upjohn informed the Inquiry that his crew found a section of starboard motor launch bow planking with Adelaide Steamship Co insignia the following day at a position, 19 15 S, 119 06 E. He referred to this discovery being about 20 miles from the 'oil patch'. In reality it was 18.4 miles from his given coordinates, which in turn were 30 n miles (30.67 degrees) from Bedout Island.

"The other articles were picked up 
about 20 miles from there."

HOWEVER

'the captain of the s.s. Bullarra had 
arrived at Cossack and reported that 
he had picked up, about 20 miles to the 
north of Bedout Island, one of the Koombana's 
boats with the company's crest on it and a
quantity of smaller wreckage." Mr. Moxon 
says that the Bullarra did not pick up a 
ship's boat, at all, but only the bow of a 
boat.'

In reality the launch bow plank was 20 miles north of Bedout Island, correlating with Captain Upjohn's log coordinates (19 15 S, 119 06 E)

Therefore, Captain Upjohn had a far better idea where Bedout Island was in relation to his ship and the various wreckage discoveries than is implied by the quoted "27 to 37 miles".

Why would Captain Upjohn have created confusion by claiming the oil patch was 27 to 37 miles from Bedout Island when clearly it was '30 miles', and yet demonstrate that he was capable of establishing coordinates positions with minimal, if no, deviation?

The answer to this, in part, can be derived from the Inquiry transcript which in turn illustrates the potential inaccuracies in newspaper reporting. The following extract is drawn from the Koombana Days online site, a truly helpful resource:

IN THE MATTER OF THE NAVIGATION ACT 1904.
and IN THE MATTER of an Inquiry into the circumstances attending the loss at sea between Port Hedland and Broome whilst on a voyage from Fremantle to Derby via Ports of the S.S. "KOOMBANA" on or about the 20th March 1912.
April 25th 1912.
BEFORE: E. P. Dowley Esq. R.M. (presiding)
Captain F. L. Parkes ) Assessors.
Captain J. W. W. Yates )
THE CROWN PROSECUTOR (Mr. F. PARKER) appeared to represent the Chief Harbor Master, Captain C. J. Irvine.
MR. MOSS K.C. appeared to represent the Adelaide Steamship Company.
[Upjohn testimony p1]

Mr. MOSS. When you were searching for the wreckage of the "Koombana" did you notice any oily substance floating on the surface?

- Yes.

Please tell the Court?

- It was in latitude 19.11 and 119.25 E.

What distance would that be off Bedout Island?

- About 27 or 28 miles - I cannot say which.

Did you take any samples of this oily substance?

- Yes, two or three dozen bottles.

What depth was there at this place?

30 or 35 fathoms. 55 m - 64 m (mean 59.5 m / 195 ft.)

Did you see any trace of the vessel at that depth? There would be nothing to indicate that the Koombana or any other vessel would be there?

- It was getting dark and it looked like the outline of a vessel. The Chief Officer said "It must be one of her decks," I said "No, the decks would not look like that." I could see no more. The engines were stopped and we drifted about 4 miles."

What was the stuff in the bottles?

- Oily, greasy water.

Have you any idea as to how that came there?

- It looked as if it came from a wreck.

There would be stuff on a ship to make this?

- Yes.

Where are these bottles?

- At the Company's office.

We will produce these if desired.

Mr. Dowley. You saw this at dusk?

- Yes.

'It looked like the outline of a vessel' does not come any more graphic or compelling than this!!

Captain Upjohn referred to the oil patch being 27 to 28 miles (not 37 miles). His coordinates, however, indicate a position 30 miles from Bedout island, a greater 2 to 3 mile uncertainty factor. 

Why? 

Reluctance to be the one pin pointing the site of the wreck of Koombana? Magnetic ore in bedrock interfering with compass readings and dead reckoning?

But Captain Upjohn goes on to answer the most telling question of all, 

"what depth was there at this place?"

"30 or 35 fathoms."

If one examines the navigation chart for Bedout Island (see link below), only when plotting a position to the northward of the coordinates, 1.85 miles, bearing 2.55 degrees, does one get an average depth between 30 and 35 fathoms = 33 fathoms; 200 ft.; 61 m.

This region of seabed is predominated by sand.

But the conundrum does not end there...

The navigation chart lists minimum depths (tidal variation, 30 to 35 fathoms) which suggests that we must look for Captain Upjohn's 30 fathom mark in the vicinity of his coordinates. This stretch of sea experiences tidal variations of up to 10 m (+/- 5 fathoms). 

When Upjohn made his discovery of the oil patch, dusk 2 April, this was one day after the full moon, i.e. high water springs, which in turn reinforces sounding fluctuations, 30 - 35 fathoms. 

30 fathoms is 180 ft (54.8 m).

Referring to the image below we see that there are 3 options for this depth in the vicinity of the original oil patch coordinates, the depth of which is 164 ft. (50 m; 27.3 fathoms).

The far bottom right figure of 180.4 ft. (55m) is 27.5 miles, bearing 45.38 degrees from Bedout Island, which is the closest we get to Captain Upjohn's estimate of 27 to 28 miles from Bedout Island.

The upper 187 ft. mark is 30.9 miles from Bedout Island, which is well beyond Captain Upjohn's 27 to 28 miles estimate and 7 ft. deeper.

The 180.4 ft. mark to the left is only 25 miles from Bedout, short of the 27-28 miles.



courtesy i-boating




courtesy i-boating, navigation charts.



27.5 miles = 19 15 51 S, 119 26 48 E
25 miles = 19 12 19 S, 119 17 22 E

If we are to nitpick given that Captain Upjohn's coordinates are basic in terms of omitting 'seconds' we can extrapolate an outer range for the original coordinates with a bias towards the 27.5 mile mark = 1.25 miles deviation. 

Therefore, the 27.5 mile mark can be considered to be either 4 or 5 miles from the original coordinates.

"The engines were stopped and we drifted about 4 miles."





What is fascinating is that the bow plank etc discovered '20 miles' north of Bedout Island is 19.7 miles from the 27.5 miles position as per image below, rather than the 18.4 miles to the original coordinates. Captain Upjohn referred to it being 20 miles. He also referred to the bow plank etc. being 20 miles north of Bedout, which it WAS!! 

How close can one get!!!!





It does seem progressively compelling that the position marked 27.5 miles could very well be our target of interest - a resting place for the steamer Koombana; a section of seabed predominated by sand rather than coral and shells (not a target for pearlers or incidental discovery).

Also note that the bow plank etc is almost due west of the 27.5 mile mark - within the parameters of the post-cyclone westward trending current. 




It is interesting that Captain Upjohn decided to collect as many bottles as 'two to three dozen' stressing the importance of the find and that the bottles, according to the outcome of the Inquiry, stayed at the Company's offices.


No guesses as to why this site, 130 + miles from the centre of the cyclone (90 miles diameter) was not actively pursued by sweeping the vicinity with a 'wire' to confirm the presence of the wreck.


If we take a closer look at the distribution of wreckage discovered (1 - 11), there is further compelling reason to pursue this potential site of the wreck of the lost RMS Koombana:


Important to note that Captain Upjohn discovered a spar awning and plank close to the oil patch coordinates, in effect the true starting point.


Recent vessel activity in the 'zone of interest' has attracted my attention and could, potentially, ultimately, reveal the final resting place of RMS Koombana.


During March (2024) there was a great deal of vessel activity in the zone of interest surrounding Captain Upjohn's coordinates (marked one to thirteen on image). According to 'vesselfinder' these were reported as fishing vessels but after some investigation it appears that these vessels were in fact allegedly connected with the gas and oil industry. One hopes that during these activities any sonar anomaly(ies) discovered on the seabed would be shared and possibly, ultimately indicate the final resting place of Koombana.




courtesy:

https://3denergi.com.au/projects/offshore-bedout-wa/


There is also a further option referring back to the 'steamer track':


The steamer Albany, 1898:

"At noon on Friday Bedout Island was passed about 6 miles out."

If we are to return to speculation, it is generally assumed that if Captain Allen had decided to follow the standard course rounding the northern aspect of Bedout Island, given the gale force winds and long rolling seas coming up from the southwest, he would likely have given the island a sensible 10 mile plus clearance (some say about 9.5 miles).

But what if visibility was still good and the worst of the cyclone was bearing down towards Balla Balla some 100 miles to the southwest, he might have done what was described by the extract above, passing Bedout Island '6 miles' out. The risk factor vs. getting as far away from the cyclone conditions as fast as possible, if you will...

If this hypothetical case is true we might need to review the trajectory from a 6 mile clearance point heading towards Gantheaume Light (Broome). An interesting picture emerges of the steamer track Koombana would have followed before disaster suddenly overtook her.




The revised Upjohn quote "27 or 28 miles" could be a significant, 8 miles 'south' of his given coordinates. This is a bearing of 52.26 degrees from Bedout and equates with 53m as per navigation chart.


If this hypothesis has merit, we are looking at a potential search block significantly further south of the original coordinates - some 8 miles, in 53-63m water, depending on tidal variations.

In fact, the wreck might lie significantly to the south of the presumed track and should be factored into future searches.

In the quest to find Koombana NE of Bedout one must also not lose sight of the possible coordinates deviation factor (James Martin, 10.5 miles further out).

All factors considered one hopes that ultimately a broad airborne magnetometer survey will reveal Koombana's final resting place whether she be intact or a significant debris field.