Backlash in Barcelona — Protests Planned Against ‘Elitist’ America’s Cup

With preliminary races of the Louis Vuitton 37th America’s Cup now underway in Barcelona, Spain, the famous sailing competition is facing the storm of over-tourism protests that have swept across much of Europe, as well as, many tourist hotspots across the globe. 

The Guardian reports that according to its supporters, the America’s Cup will bring in €1bn to Barcelona, create 19,000 jobs and, by the time the last sail is furled on 20 October, have attracted an extra 2.5 million visitors to the city.

The ultimate sporting competition for the super-rich marks the latest attempt by the Spanish city to attract “quality rather than quantity” tourism.

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Update : Bayesian Tragedy — Manslaughter Investigation, “Unsinkable,” & Many Question Unanswered

Five days ago, the 56-meter-long sailing yacht Bayesian sank at anchor off Sicily in extreme weather. Fifteen people on board were rescued and seven died, including British tech tycoon Mike Lynch and his 18-year-old daughter, Hannah.

This morning Italian prosecutors said that they have opened an investigation into culpable shipwreck and manslaughter over the deaths in the yacht’s sinking. They stressed, however, that the investigation was in its initial stages and they were not currently looking at anyone specifically.

Contrary to initial reports that suggested the vessel may have sunk because of a waterspout, the authorities now say the most likely cause was a localized, powerful wind known as a downburst.

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Workers ‘Treated Like Slaves’ on Scottish Trawlers

A BBC investigation has revealed that dozens of workers from around the world may have been trafficked into the UK to work for a small family-owned Scottish fishing firm.

Thirty-five men from the Philippines, Ghana, India, and Sri Lanka were recognized as victims of modern slavery by the Home Office after being referred to it between 2012 and 2020.

The workers were employed by TN Trawlers and its sister companies, owned by the Nicholson family, based in the small town of Annan on the southern coast of Scotland.

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Did S/Y Bayesian’s Design Contribute to its Catastrophic Sinking?

The 56-meter-long sailing yacht Bayesian sank at anchor of Sicily in extreme weather early Monday morning, with the loss of one dead and six missing. Among the missing are British tech tycoon Mike Lynch and his 18-year-old daughter, Hannah.

Following the sinking, the most common question asked was “How could a well-found yacht of that size be knocked down and sink, even in the high winds and a reported waterspout that were present at the time of the tragedy?”

Was the yacht simply overwhelmed by the weather or was there some aspect of the design or operation of the yacht that made it vulnerable? The immediate answer is that it is just too soon to tell.

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UK Tech Tycoon’s Yacht Bayesian Sinks After Being Struck by Water Spout, One Dead and Six Missing

The 56-meter sailing yacht Bayesian sank early Monday morning in severe weather while at anchor off the coast of Sicily. The yacht is believed to have been struck by a waterspout. There were 22 passengers and crew aboard when the yacht sank.  Fifteen were rescued from a life raft, while one person died. Six are reported missing and feared dead.

Among the missing are British tech tycoon Mike Lynch and his 18-year-old daughter, Hannah. His wife, Angela Bacares, was reported to have been rescued.

Also among the rescued was a one-year-old British girl. The child was airlifted to the children’s hospital in Palermo. Eight people were hospitalized in total, according to the mayor’s office.

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Apex Boats — the Unlikely and Dangerous Naval Drones of World War II’s Operation Dragoon

Apex boat, Operation Dragoon

Based on the recent conflicts in the Black Sea and the Red Sea, it appears highly likely that the future of maritime warfare will be shaped by the use of naval drones. This made me wonder when the first naval drones were used in combat.

To the best of my knowledge, the first naval drones used in combat were the Apex boats used in Operation Dragoon, the Allied amphibious landing in the South of France during World War II, eighty years ago last week.

These drones were modified radio-controlled landing craft, loaded to capacity with high explosives, intended to be used to clear beach obstacles and mines. The Apex boats were moderately successful yet proved at times to be almost as dangerous to the Allied soldiers and sailors as they were to the Nazi defenders.

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Lost Wreck of WW1 Warship HMS Hawke Found in ‘Remarkable’ Condition

The BBC reports that the wreck discovered off the Aberdeenshire coast is believed to be the lost Royal Navy warship HMS Hawke sunk by a torpedo during World War One.

The wreck of the Edgar-class protected cruiser was discovered by a team of divers about 70 miles east of Fraserburgh earlier this week in “remarkable” condition.

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Young Humpback Whale in Boston Harbor Briefly Delays Ferry Service

The  Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) said Wednesday that a juvenile humpback whale swimming and breaching in Boston Harbor may cause minor delays to ferry service through Thursday, August 15.

CBSNews reports that the 2-year-old whale, estimated to be between 35 and 40 feet long, has been in Boston Harbor since the end of July. It likely followed prey into the harbor, explained Linnea Mayfield, the naturalist manager for Boston Harbor City Cruises. 

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US Coast Guard Can’t Crew All Its Ships Due to Recruiting Shortage

Last week, US Coast Guard Vice Commandant Adm. Kevin Lunday spoke at the Brookings Institution and addressed the service’s enlisted force’s ongoing 10 percent manning shortage.  Entering the fiscal year, the Coast Guard was about 3,000 members short of end strength numbers. “That’s the backbone of the Coast Guard,” Lunday said.

Due to the shortfall, the Coast Guard “can’t crew all our ships” and has had to “temporarily shutter some of our smaller stations,” the vice commandant said.

“We had to lay up three of our major cutters because we don’t have enough enlisted personnel to crew them.” Since the action, the service has shifted funds from other parts of the budget to bolster recruiting and retention.

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Boaty McBoatface Returns From 55 Day Undersea Voyage

Boaty McBoatface, referred to as the UK’s most famous robot, recently returned to Scotland after 55 days on a more-than-2,000km undersea scientific odyssey from Iceland, studying the pace of climate change. 

BBC reports that the autonomous underwater vehicle (AUV) was hunting for marine snow – “poo, basically” in the words of one researcher. This refers to tiny particles that sink to the ocean floor, storing huge amounts of carbon.

The deep ocean, referred to as the “twilight zone”, is enormously mysterious. Acting as the eyes and ears of the scientists, Boaty went there on the longest journey yet for its class of submarine. 

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Fire & Explosion on Container Ship YM Mobility Berthed in Ningbo, China

Containers caught fire and exploded on the 6,589 TEU YM Mobility today at around 1:40 PM, local time, while berthed at the Port of Ningbo, China. A statement by Yang Ming, the ship’s operator, said that preliminary findings suggest that an explosion occurred in a container loaded with dangerous goods on board. Immediate fire-fighting measures have been taken at the scene, the fire has been brought under control

China Central Television (CCTV), citing preliminary findings from authorities, said the goods included lithium batteries and tert-Butyl peroxybenzoate, an organic compound that is flammable and explosive and should not be stored in an environment over 30C (86F), as reported by Reuters

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Great Barrier Reef Threatened by Highest Ocean Heat in 400 Years

In a new study, published in the journal Nature, scientists say that sea surface temperatures over the past decade in and around Australia’s Great Barrier Reef are the highest on record for 400 years. The study concludes that these increased temperatures, driven by climate change, now pose an “existential threat” to the vast coral reef.

Extreme heat has caused five mass coral bleaching events in the past nine years alone.

“The science tells us that the Great Barrier Reef is in danger – and we should be guided by the science,” Prof Helen McGregor, from the University of Wollongong, told BBC News.

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Cocaine Worth $1 Million Swept Ashore in Florida Keys by Hurricane Debby

Hurricane Debby brought high winds and storm surge as it traveled up and ultimately came ashore on the Gulf Coast of Florida. It also washed packages of cocaine worth more than $1 million ashore in Islamorada in the Florida Keys, officials said.

Debby, which slammed into the state as a Category 1 hurricane but has since been downgraded to a tropical storm, washed the drugs ashore in the Florida Keys, U.S. Border Patrol acting chief patrol Agent Samuel Briggs II wrote on social media.
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Unexpected Cetacean Spectator in Olympic Surfing Competition in Tahiti

Most of the 2024 Summer Olympic Games have been held in Paris. The surfing competition, however, took place some 9,800 miles from Paris in the French Polynesian island of Tahiti. 

NPR reports that while Brazil’s Tatiana Weston-Webb and Costa Rica’s Brisa Hennessy were waiting for waves in the surfing semifinals, they spotted an unexpected spectator — a humpback whale breaching not far offshore.

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Update: A23a, the Iceberg “That Refuses to Die,” Caught in Antarctic Vortex

In January, we posted about an iceberg designated A23a, the world’s largest, which had begun to drift on the Antarctic Circumpolar Current into “iceberg alley.” As it drifted, it was being eroded by waves and melting in the relatively warmer waters of the Southern Ocean. The impact of the waves carved huge arches and caves in the 400-meter-high walls of the iceberg.

The expectations were that the berg would continue to melt as it drifted and would begin to break up, with luck, missing the British Overseas Territory of South Georgia.  

Instead, A23a went precisely nowhere, as reported by the BBC. It remains in place just north of South Orkney Islands, turning in an anti-clockwise direction by about 15 degrees a day. And as long as it does this, its decay and eventual demise will be delayed.

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More Baltic Bubbly — 100 Sealed Bottles of Champagne Discovered in 19th Century Shipwreck

A team of Polish divers discovered the wreck of a 19th-century vessel laden with about 100 sealed bottles of champagne.  The shipwreck is in the Baltic Sea in 60 meters of water about 20 nautical miles south of the Swedish island of Öland.

“I think we have a treasure,” Tomasz Stachura, leader of the Polish diving group Baltictech, posted to Facebook after the team’s July 11 discovery.

Stachura, who specializes in underwater photography, said the ship was in “very good condition” and “brimming with historical treasures, including crates of champagne, baskets of mineral water and porcelain,” according to the Washington Post.

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Scientists Discover “Dark Oxygen” on the Deep Ocean Floor

A bed of manganese nodules offshore of the Cook Islands

About half the oxygen we breathe comes from the ocean.  It was long presumed that this oceanic oxygen was produced by photosynthesis, the process by which green plants use sunlight to synthesize foods by absorbing carbon dioxide and water, emitting oxygen as a byproduct. For at least a decade, however, researchers have observed significant levels of oxygen in the dark, deep ocean, far too deep for sunlight to reach and therefore too deep for photosynthesis.

New research published in the journal Nature Geoscience reveals that nature has devised a way to produce oxygen without the involvement of plants. It’s “an amazing and unexpected finding,” Daniel Jones, a researcher at the National Oceanography Center in the United Kingdom who wasn’t involved in the study, tells CNN’s Katie Hunt.

Rather than relying on sunlight and plants, the new research concluded that “dark oxygen” is being produced in the deep ocean, apparently by electrolysis involving lumps of metal on the seafloor.

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Sperm Whale Killed by Ship in Strait of Gibraltar

The whale’s severe injury was apparent in footage captured shortly after the incident. Photo: CIRCE

Yesterday, we posted about the sinking of the British sailing yacht Bonhomme William last week, following an attack by orcas in the Strait of Gibraltar. Fortunately, the crew were rescued without injury. 

Two days later, a sperm whale encountered a ship with a more tragic outcome. According to the BBC, the endangered sperm whale – nicknamed Julio by scientists – was killed in a collision with a vessel in the busy Strait of Gibraltar.

Researchers say this is the fifth sperm whale to die after being struck by a ship since they started monitoring the population in the area more than 10 years ago.

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New Orca Attacks — Yachts Sunk Off Gibraltar & Damaged Off Coast of Brittany

The mystifying attacks on sailboats by a pod of Iberian orcas continue.

The crew of the British yacht Bonhomme William had to be rescued after an orca sank their vessel in the Strait of Gibraltar, according to Spanish authorities. It is the latest in a long-running series of “interactions” between orcas and midsize sailing yachts off the coast of Spain.

Maritime Executive reports that the Maritime Rescue Coordination Centre at Tarifa received a distress call from the yacht Bonhomme William on Wednesday night. The crew reported that their vessel had been disabled by orcas, which had hit it several times, and was adrift about two miles off Punta Camarinal in the strait’s western entrance.

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Robert L. Allen, Chronicler and Champion of Black Sailors in Port Chicago Disaster & Mutiny, Dies at 82

Robert L. Allen, who definitively told the story of 50 Black sailors who were convicted of conspiracy to commit mutiny for refusing to continue to load munitions onto cargo ships after explosions had blown apart two ships at a California port during World War II, died on July 10 at his home in Benicia, in Northern California. He was 82.

On July 17, 1944, two ships being loaded with munitions in Port Chicago, California exploded. Over 4,000 tons of bombs, shells, depth charges, and fuel erupted in two shock waves that were felt by seismographs at the University of California, Berkeley. The second, larger shock wave was equivalent to a 3.4 magnitude earthquake. The calamity killed 320 people of which 220 were black seamen.

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