Adrift in the Atlantic, a boat of death and lost dreams

In this combination of photos, clothing found on deceased migrants whose remains were recovered from a Mauritanian boat on May 28, 2021, are laid out at the Scarborough police station on the island of Tobago, Trinidad and Tobago, Friday, Jan. 21, 2022. The boat was found by local fishermen drifting nearby on May 28, 2021 with 14 bodies and other skeletal remains inside. An AP investigation has found that the boat had departed the port town of Nouadhibou in Mauritania, Africa more than four months earlier with 43 migrants. (AP Photo/Felipe Dana)

For nearly two years, The Associated Press assembled puzzle pieces from across three continents to uncover the story of a mysterious Mauritanian boat — and the people it carried to death as they drifted across the Atlantic Ocean and appeared in the Caribbean island of Tobago on May 28, 2021.

Mauritania, a large country in northwest Africa, is nearly 3,000 miles (4,800 km) away from Tobago. Evidence found on the boat — and its style and color as a typical Mauritanian “pirogueâ€â€” suggested the dead were likely African migrants who were trying to reach Europe but got lost in the Atlantic.

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