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The Edmund Fitzerald sank in lake Superior in Nov 1975, not lake Ontario. Where it sank was near Superior It was approx 15 mile NNW of White Fish Point, well into Lake Superiorhttp://encarta.msn.com/map_701514001/lake_superior.html link shows the charted point of the wreck.
way to many to count and we will probably never know the exact number but i'd say around 100 boats sank in 2006.
D: U-Boats sank many ships in the Caribbean during ww
just over 1/8 of the life boats sank
In civilian ships alone, the figure was in the thousands. <><><> During WW II, German U-Boats sank 175 Allied warships; 2,825 merchant ships
The SS Edmund Fitzgerald sank in Lake Superior during a storm on November 10, 1975, killing 29 men.
After Titanic sank, those that were left were 712 people who made it into boats (and lived) and many more doomed people in the water.
The largest was the Edmund Fitzgerald, which sank in November of 1975 with the loss of all hands in Lake Superior, about 20 miles NW of Whitefish Point, in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. It was immortalized in the song by Gordon Lightfoot. The Edmund Fitzgerald at 720 feet long was the largest followed by the Cypus (420 feet long) and the John B. Cowle (420 feet long) which sank around the turn of the last century.
The Steamship, SS Edmund Fitzgerald, was a freight carrier which sank in Lake Superior on 10 November 1975. Up to today theories abound but no definitive cause for the sinking has been established.
If you are asking about the Titanic that sank April 15, 1912, then it is not in a lake at all. It sank in the Atlantic Ocean.
Many boats, ships and aircraft have sank off the coast of Ireland. The most famous, and the one you are probably referring to, is the ship known as the Lusitania which sank on the 7th of May, 1915.