Thank you for the encouraging words Bernie.
While the wreck is under the jurisdiction of the Brazilian Navy it was encountered during commercial survey works for an engineering project and the vessel`s identity was not initially known. During the field season I participated on the wreck was surveyed and parts of the wreck which extended higher in the water column than the harbour modifications allowed were cut away, raised and registered, using three dimensional photographic techniques, and re-deposited in deeper water to one side of the main wreck site. This was a compromise between the time and expense necessary for a full excavation and large scale conservation, and the pressures of a large engineering project which had already received federal approval. The majority of the wreck remains untouched and in situ.
Project funding was the responsibility of the contracting engineering firm and only covered the field work and conservation. The archaeological team is still processing data and currently there is no website detailing our work, or the wreck, but the project forms the basis of a PhD my boss is working towards and a museum exhibit is planned. My ongoing research is a labour of love as I must now work with other projects. However, the wreck needs to be better understood and further researched. I would be delighted if my colleagues and I could create a website as more details are known.
A small number of objects (already detached and vulnerable to loss) and structural samples were recovered during the field season and I have spent a number of months stabilising and treating them. These will be kept in the laboratories of a public federal university and used for future research and analysis.