cover image SUBMERGED: Adventures of America's Most Elite Underwater Archeology Team

SUBMERGED: Adventures of America's Most Elite Underwater Archeology Team

Daniel F. Lenihan, . . Newmarket, $25.95 (287pp) ISBN 978-1-55704-505-8

Recounting his 25 years as founder and director of the Submerged Cultural Resources Unit—the underwater archeological team of the National Park Service—Lenihan (Wake of the Perdido Star, with Gene Hackman) offers an entertaining mix of maritime history, memoir and adventure tale. Started in 1975 to keep fortune hunters from looting national water parks for sunken treasure and damaging vital historical material, Lenihan's unit has explored the wondrous (and deadly) sinkholes in Florida and Mexico; studied shipwrecks in the Great Lakes, Micronesia and places in between; and investigated the remains of the USS Arizona and the ships sunk by nuclear bombs near Bikini atoll. While the author is an authority on sea archeology and naval history, he and his divers are also underwater cowboys and cowgirls, thrilling in the dangers of their extreme sport. A sharp, engaging writer, Lenihan describes the terrifying aspects of his work—the bone-chilling cold, impenetrable clouds of silt and the notorious bends—with a good dose of black humor. (A surreal trip through an old impoundment house submerged in the reservoir of Amistad Dam in Texas is especially haunting.) Fast paced, full of amiable characters, the book will appeal to divers, maritime enthusiasts and anyone fond of nautical hijinks and swaggering seafarers. Photos and maps not seen by PW. (Mar.)