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Harbor Township resident David R. McAuliffe, said the boat was found south of the Great Egg Harbor channel marker, partially buried by sand, upside down and facing east.What caused the wreck was not immediately clear. Army Corps of Engineers' ongoing $15.6 million Ocean City beach replenishment project, and some are asking whether McAuliffe may have run into some of that gear."That's a very good possibility, but it's all just speculation at this point," said Jack Moran, who owns a Sea Tow franchise in Cape May County.Reached on Friday, Army Corps spokesman Ed Voigt said he had just heard about the possibility and that the Army Corps would await details from the Coast Guard investigation. Voigt said a company under contract to the Army Corps, the Great Lakes Dredge and Dock Co., is in the midst of a beach replenishment project for Ocean City and Brigantine and is pumping sand into the north end of Ocean City this week. The dredging operation uses metal pipes, which can be submerged or partially submerged, to move sand in from offshore burrow areas to the beaches."The Coast Guard has already contacted our folks because they want to investigate and find out what went wrong. At this point, we're going to defer to the Coast Guard," Voigt said.Until the boat is raised and studied, the Coast Guard said it is just speculation to blame the accident on dredging equipment.Moran said a diver reached the vessel Thursday, but visibility was poor. He said a salvage plan is being worked out.Petty Officer Nicholas Ameen, a Coast Guard spokesman, said investigators would be on scene during the recovery