“A Collision at Sea…” the Most Famous Thing Thucydides Never Said

Thucydides is often said to have first written, “A collision at sea can ruin your entire day, ”  in his epic history, The Peloponnesian War. While the statement is unquestionably true, Thucydides never wrote it.   Today the New York Times’ Fred Shapiro attempts to  trackdown the origin of the mis-quote: Quotes Uncovered: When Ships Collide.

Herb Caen of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote about this on Feb. 14, 1971. He said: Continue reading

The New Generation of Narco Submarines

Until recent the narco subs used to smuggle cocaine into the United States were submarines in name only, as they were not designed to dive underwater and resurface. Last week, however, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration and Ecuadorian authorities seized a 108 foot long (33 meter) fiberglass narco submarine with a  conning tower, periscope and air conditioning system which could dive to a an estimated depth of 65 feet.  The submarine was found at a jungle shipyard in Ecuador near the Colombian border as it was preparing for its first voyage.  It was described as the first fully-operational submarine built for transporting multi-ton quantities of cocaine ever to have been seized by government authorities.

Narco sub could have submerged to 65 ft

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Revolutionary War Sister Ships Cannons on EBay

Thanks to Alaric Bond for pointing out this wonderful auction on EBay.  No bids yet but there are still five days left.   I would love to own these beauties but can’t figure out where I would put them or what I would do with them.  It would be awfully tempting to fire them from time to time.  Probably upset the neighbors.  Difficult to tell whether they are authentic.

Revolutionary War Sister Cannons
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Tall Ships come to Cleveland

We had previously posted about the fleet of  sailing ships visiting Toronto as part of the Great Lakes United TALL SHIPS CHALLENGE,  coordinated by the American Sail Training Association (ASTA) across all five Great Lakes.  The fleet has now moved on to Cleveland, Ohio.  More than 100,000 people are expected to attend the Cleveland Tall Ships Festival.  The festival starts today and will continue through Sunday.

Tall Ships come to Cleveland

John Diebold, Who Explored The Seabed With Sound

John Diebold, 1944-2010

John Diebold, a marine scientist who sailed the world’s oceans for more than four decades using sound waves to study earthquake faults, underwater volcanoes and other normally hidden features of the seabed, died on July 1 at his home in Nyack, N.Y. The apparent cause was a heart attack, his family said; he was 66.
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SS Great Britain : From Seabed to National Treasure – A Model for Ship Restoration?

Forty years ago, on July 5th, 100,000 people lined the banks of the River Avon to witness the return of the SS Great Britain, or what was left of her.   After spending 37 years on the seabed in the Falklands, she was a rusting hulk.  In 1843, she was Isambard Kingdom Brunel‘s masterpiece, the world’s first iron-hulled screw-driven passenger liner.   She has now been restored to her former glory.  As a museum she has been toured by  over 5 million people.   She may be a model or at least a source inspiration for what can be done  in the restoration and preservation of historic ships.

SS Great Britain: From seabed to national treasure
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“A Whale” Skimmer Not Ready for Prime Time – Initial Testing Inconclusive

Whale of a skimmer not ready to attack Gulf oil after weekend of testing

The behemoth Taiwanese oil skimmer, A Whale, is not yet ready attack the Gulf of Mexico oil spill after a weekend of testing proved inconclusive, said a statement this morning from TMT Shipping Offshore, owner of the ship.
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Melville’s Leviathan

No, not Moby Dick.  Scientists have recently discovered the fossilized remains of an ancient whale with huge, fearsome teeth, which they have dubbed Leviathan melvillei,  in honor of Herman Melville.   The 12 million old whale was slightly smaller than a modern sperm whale but had shark-like teeth half again as large as the conical teeth of modern sperm whales.

‘Sea monster’ whale fossil unearthed
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IRobot Seaglider – Vacuum Cleaner’s Aquatic Cousin Monitoring the Oil Spill

iRobot Seaglider Ready to Deploy

We own a Roomba, which is a robot vacuum cleaner made by iRobot.   It looks like a cross between an overgrown hockey puck and a squashed R2D2 from Star Wars.  It softly whirs and occasionally beeps as it crisscrosses the floor vacuuming, until it eventually runs low on power, at which point it heads back to its charging station, to be ready to vacuum again.   (We love our Roomba. )

IRobot builds more that robot vacuum cleaners, of course.  Right now three iRobot Seagliders are in service monitoring the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.  Here is how Colin Angle, Chairman and CEO of  iRobot  describes the devices:
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Arctic Icebreaking – the USCGC Healy and the NS 50 Let Pobedy

NASA has recently published an analysis of the arctic operations of the icebreaker USCGC Healy. The Healy has been serving as a research vessel in Arctic water with more than 4,200 square feet of scientific laboratory space, numerous electronic sensor systems, oceanographic winches, and accommodations for up to 50 scientists.

Icebreakers Smash Frozen Arctic Ocean in Surprising Ways
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Julian Stockwin’s Victory – A Review

We have fallen way behind in our book reviews. Until we catch up, here is a review of Julian Stockwin’s new novel, Victory, republished with permission from Astrodene’s Historic Naval Fiction.

Astrodene Review: Victory by Julian Stockwin

Victory starts off with a major setback for Kydd and keeps up a fast pace throughout which makes it another page turner for Julian Stockwin.
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“A Whale” to Begin Testing in the Gulf This Weekend – Will it Work?

A Whale” is by far the biggest oil skimmer ever built.   The bigger question question may be, “Will it work?”  The converted oil/bulk ore carrier is currently docked in Boothville, La., docks as it is made ready for 48 hours of testing in the Gulf over the weekend.

Video from CNN of the ship:  World’s Largest Oil Skimmer

Search Restarts for the Terror, Erebus and HMS Investigator

After a season’s delay due to lack of access to icebreakers, Parks Canada is renewing its search for Franklin’s ship’s Erebus and Terror.  They will also be searching for the HMS Investigator, a ship which was caught in the ice and sank when sent to search for Franklin.

Parks Canada mounting summertime search for three storied Arctic wrecks

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