Adolf Hitler was a ferry ride away from Nazi atomic BOMB material to blow up London

Scientists and historians in Norway have located the ferry used to transport a key component in Hitler’s plot during World War 2.

The 170ft SF Hydro ferry transported heavy water – an ingredient needed for nuclear reactors – across a Norwegian lake, 100 miles from Oslo.

But Norwegian resistance fighters blew up the ferry in 1944 after Winston Churchill ordered its destruction.

Scientists working on the National Geographic series Drain the Oceans have now located the ferry 460ft below the surface of Lake Tinn.

They found 40 barrels of heavy water after virtually lifting the vessel.

Professor Eric Grove, a naval historian, told The Daily Telegraph: “After the war, those involved in the German nuclear programme said that the loss of the heavy water was absolutely decisive.

“It stopped their reactor programme in its tracks.”

More barrels of heavy water are believed to be crushed next to the sunken wreck.

The Nazis launched their nuclear programme in April 1939, and took control of the key plant at Vemork, which produced heavy water near the lake, when they invaded Norway in 1940.

The Allies, fearing Hitler would build a nuclear bomb to obliterate London, ordered a series of daring raids to destroy the plant.

In 1943, Norwegian commandos blew up the plant, with the raid later immortalised in the Kirk Douglas film The Heroes of Telemark.

Following the raids, the Nazis started moving barrels of the remaining heavy water from Vemork to Germany by ferry and train.

But Norwegian resistance fighters blew up the ferry using a timed bomb, exploding it when it reached the middle of the lake.

Technology used by the National Geographic team shows the boat still in one piece at the bottom of the lake.

Dr Fredrik Soreide, of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology, said: “We wanted to go down and take up a barrel to prove that this was in fact the heavy water that was being shipped to Germany.”

The 10-part series Drain the Oceans starts on Thursday, September 8 on the National Geographic channel.