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Second report. Unpath'd waters: marine and maritime collections in the UK

Second report. Unpath'd waters: marine and maritime collections in the UK
Second report. Unpath'd waters: marine and maritime collections in the UK
The UK Marine Area covers 867,400 km2, 3.5 times the terrestrial extent. Our marine heritage is extraordinary. Shipwrecks from the Bronze Age to the World Wars bear testimony to Britain as an island nation, a destination for trade and conquest and, in the past, the heart of a global empire. Coastal communities have been shaped by their maritime heritage with stories of loss and heroism. Deeper in time, what is now the North Sea was dry land, peopled by prehistoric communities. Our current land would have been distant uplands above hills and plains and rivers now lost and forgotten.

Numerous collections represent this heritage, covering 23,000 years, including charts, documents, images, film, oral histories, sonar surveys, seismic data, bathymetry, archaeological investigations, artefacts, artworks and palaeo-environmental cores. These are unconnected and inaccessible. This matters because the story of our seas is of huge interest to the UK public, with millions visiting maritime museums annually, and marine exploitation increasing dramatically for energy, minerals, trade, food and leisure.

To unlock new stories and effect sustainable management, we must join up our marine collections. Unpath’d Waters brings together universities, agencies, museums, trusts and experts to confront this challenge. AI is being applied to innovate searching across collections, simulations to visualise landscapes, and science to identify wrecks and research their artefacts. Unpath’d Waters will deliver management tools to protect our most significant heritage and invite the public to co-design new ways of interacting with the collections. The methods, code and resources created will be published openly so they can be used to shape the future of UK marine heritage.
Towards a National Collection
Sloane, Barney
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Richards, Julian
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Sturt, Fraser
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Coats, Anna
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Roberts, Mike
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Gaffney, V.
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Gaffney, Vince
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Jeffrey, Stuart
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Choong Han Lin, Andrew
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Perry, Sara
42966a78-a719-40cd-a796-12e2ec1ad768
Sloane, Barney
b71b9f1b-7255-41e1-8ed3-226746bfe219
Richards, Julian
fc256e8d-6f36-443e-bfc6-9a8625a2ea01
Sturt, Fraser
442e14e1-136f-4159-bd8e-b002bf6b95f6
Coats, Anna
1b8d8571-5380-4282-86f7-aef1fede28ae
Roberts, Mike
55bea6a8-6f1d-49ee-a697-7e93a9f62401
Gaffney, V.
247f3241-d601-4a18-a842-b4e693cad856
Gaffney, Vince
645e688e-d523-4d9e-be99-7631d2a96a40
Jeffrey, Stuart
777813f4-b0cf-4a29-b16e-e80e1ce5468d
Choong Han Lin, Andrew
c093f690-b94e-4600-9b68-b021cf43ab31
Perry, Sara
42966a78-a719-40cd-a796-12e2ec1ad768

Sloane, Barney, Richards, Julian, Sturt, Fraser, Coats, Anna, Roberts, Mike, Gaffney, V., Gaffney, Vince, Jeffrey, Stuart, Choong Han Lin, Andrew and Perry, Sara (2023) Second report. Unpath'd waters: marine and maritime collections in the UK Towards a National Collection 37pp. (doi:10.5281/zenodo.7984562).

Record type: Monograph (Project Report)

Abstract

The UK Marine Area covers 867,400 km2, 3.5 times the terrestrial extent. Our marine heritage is extraordinary. Shipwrecks from the Bronze Age to the World Wars bear testimony to Britain as an island nation, a destination for trade and conquest and, in the past, the heart of a global empire. Coastal communities have been shaped by their maritime heritage with stories of loss and heroism. Deeper in time, what is now the North Sea was dry land, peopled by prehistoric communities. Our current land would have been distant uplands above hills and plains and rivers now lost and forgotten.

Numerous collections represent this heritage, covering 23,000 years, including charts, documents, images, film, oral histories, sonar surveys, seismic data, bathymetry, archaeological investigations, artefacts, artworks and palaeo-environmental cores. These are unconnected and inaccessible. This matters because the story of our seas is of huge interest to the UK public, with millions visiting maritime museums annually, and marine exploitation increasing dramatically for energy, minerals, trade, food and leisure.

To unlock new stories and effect sustainable management, we must join up our marine collections. Unpath’d Waters brings together universities, agencies, museums, trusts and experts to confront this challenge. AI is being applied to innovate searching across collections, simulations to visualise landscapes, and science to identify wrecks and research their artefacts. Unpath’d Waters will deliver management tools to protect our most significant heritage and invite the public to co-design new ways of interacting with the collections. The methods, code and resources created will be published openly so they can be used to shape the future of UK marine heritage.

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Published date: 30 May 2023

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499723
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499723
PURE UUID: ebec4f32-287c-4f67-84d1-0c0375106942
ORCID for Fraser Sturt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3010-990X

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Date deposited: 01 Apr 2025 16:42
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 01:55

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Contributors

Author: Barney Sloane
Author: Julian Richards
Author: Fraser Sturt ORCID iD
Author: Anna Coats
Author: Mike Roberts
Author: V. Gaffney
Author: Vince Gaffney
Author: Stuart Jeffrey
Author: Andrew Choong Han Lin
Author: Sara Perry

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