The first attacks on Australia by the Japanese were made by four
submarines of the Sixth Submarine Squadron of the Imperial Japanese
Navy. Together, these 80-man boats laid mines, and then waited in their
killing zones for targets to torpedo. On 20 January 1942, it all went
horribly wrong. Sunk with all hands, the submarine I-124 remains outside
Darwin today, testimony to bravery but also to folly.
Avonmore Books' new edition of a 1990s work features new and improved
graphics, a host of photographs, and the complete story of the submarine
action and events through the decades beyond - for the sunken vessel did
not lie easy. Code seekers, treasure hunters, and potential salvors
eventually led to the formation of the Historic Shipwrecks Act.