
Photo: Robin Bell
The gangway to HMS Belfast, collapsed into the Thames River in London shortly after noon today. Two work men are reported to have been taken to the hospital with what are described as abrasions. More than 100 people on board the ship, including 30 school children, were evacuated in small boats. HMS Belfast is an ex-Royal Navy light cruiser which saw action in both the Second World War and the Korean War and is permanently docked on the Thames as part of the Imperial War Museum. Not surprisingly, a spokesman said that the ship will be closed until further notice.
Terror on the Thames as gangway leading to HMS Belfast collapses
Earlier this month we posted about a virtual problem with the ship, when graphic artists for the London 2012 Olympics Committee airbrushed HMS Belfast out of a promotional poster showing the Thames River.








Last year, I went to the
The World War II era US Coast Guard Cutter
The clean-up continues on the
At least 75 whale skeletons, believed to be more than two millions years old, were recently unearthed in the Atacama Desert in Chile, a kilometer away from the ocean. The find is believed to be the best preserved graveyard of pre-historic whales in the world. Of the 75 skeletons found, more than 20 are perfectly intact. Researchers speculate that there could be many more skeletons not yet discovered. Most of the fossils are baleen whales which measure about 25 feet long. The whale bones were discovered during a project to widen Pan American Highway, or Route 5, Chile’s main north-south road.