HOME
CAMERAS
Latest Pictures
Streaming Video
FORUM
Forum Home
FAQ
Show Unread Posts
Show Recent Posts
My Messages
Calendar
Who's Online
Stats
BLOGS
Imprints
FalconWatch
STORES
Our Stores
The Scrape
Rfalconcam Zazzle
Birdorable
ARCHIVES
Photo Archive
Archive viewer
Quick-N-Dirty 30
Video Archive
The Dailies
YouTube
Albums
Banding Day 2008
DONATE
Sponsorship Corner
Corporate Sponsors
Individual Donors
LEARN MORE
Education
History
GVAS and Kodak
Rochester's Falcons
Family Tree
Falcon Information
Introduction
Physical Description
Flight and Hunting
Courtship and Nesting
Falcon Lifecycle
Falcon Habitat
Subspecies and Range
Endangered Species
Peregrine's Future
Falconry History
Falconry Today
More Information
Rochester Weather
Weather Radar Maps
Shaky's Info Page
About Us
Privacy Policy
Contact us
THE FORUM
24-Nov-24, 11:44:36 PM
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
1 Hour
1 Day
1 Week
1 Month
Forever
Login with username, password and session length
Note
: The views expressed on this page are not necessarily those of GVAS or Rfalconcam.
Home
Help
Search
Calendar
Login
Register
Rfalconcam Forum
>
Anything Else
>
Totally OT
>
Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
« previous
next »
Print
Author
Topic: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia (Read 5302 times)
0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.
valhalla
Guest
Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
on:
22-Jan-12, 07:50:21 AM »
I wasn't able to verify or disprove, but it shows clear grounding:
AIS doesn't lie! Here's the recorded track of the Costa Concordia. You can actually see the impact with the rock change the course of the ship! Be sure to watch full screen!
http://www.shipspotting.com/videos/video.php?vid=982
Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Last Edit: 22-Jan-12, 08:02:58 AM by Shaky
»
Logged
Shaky
Bathrobe Brigadier
Administrator
Never Leaves 'Puter
Like Count: 354
Offline
Posts: 7,130
Working on my book
Re: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Reply #1 on:
22-Jan-12, 08:07:13 AM »
Very interesting. The initial reports said that the ship turned to port, but this reconstruction shows it turned starboard, which would normally cause the ship to list to port. So why did it end up on its starboard side? Thrusters? The ship did appear to be moving sideways.
Logged
Donna
I'm Falcon Crazy
Like Count: 1650
Offline
Posts: 25,377
<3 FLY FREE "CHARLOTTE" <3
Re: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Reply #2 on:
22-Jan-12, 08:15:27 AM »
The whole thing is just disturbing!
Logged
Mirta
Fledgling
Like Count: 107
Offline
Posts: 121
Re: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Reply #3 on:
22-Jan-12, 08:29:35 AM »
Very interesting. I will show it to my husband who is ship pilot in all the ports of Patagonia.
IĀ“ve travelled a lot on big merchant ships and in crusiers in Antartica, and it seems to me very weird to watch a ship sailing directly to the near coast at 15knots
Mirta
Logged
valhalla
Guest
Re: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Reply #4 on:
22-Jan-12, 09:56:53 AM »
Exactly, Mirta! The only time we did that was when the channel came right up on shore (Fairlee Creek, MD; Little Narragansette, CT/RI; & Salt Ponds, VA). We always paid a healthy respect to what was underneath us and the closer to shore.....
Logged
Paul Hamilton
Tiercel
Like Count: 268
Offline
Posts: 720
Re: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Reply #5 on:
22-Jan-12, 11:34:52 AM »
Back in the summer of 1970, I was with the University of Miami Research Vessel
Gerda
when we anchored right off Little San Salvador Island in the Bahamas. We had good charts, a depth sounder, and a Decca navigator (limited coverage, but nearly as good as GPS), but the captain still chose to put research divers into the water to lead him through the coral heads. Sure, one could easily see the bottom from the bridge, but the clarity of the water made it difficult to judge whether what you were seeing was ten feet down or a hundred feet down. I was one of the research divers, and it was a revelation to me how many uncharted rocks I had to guide the ship around. What appeared fairly flat and harmless from the surface was actually a labyrinth. From underwater, it was cliffs and steep, winding canyons, and my memory is one of leading the ship through a very narrow canyon. If the situation off Giglio Island is at all similar, I can imagine the captain, having made close passes there without incident in the past, concluding that it was safe to do it again.
We had a far better captain, and things turned out well. Once we had anchored
Gerda
in a safe area inside the reefs, we embarked upon a "Guns of Navarone" operation involving us making a landing on shore via Zodiac inflatable boat, and scaling the cliffs with fifty pound geophone cables. We drove in geophones all over the cliff and ran a cable to the ship. This meant that we could map the structure of the ocean bottom using explosives set off by another ship. The original plan had been for the divers to swim out cables to floating hydrophones and do the experiment in the open ocean, but we didn't get good enough reception from the hydrophones.
After we had emplaced the geophones, we were out of a job until it was time to sail out through the reefs again. We spent the next several days snorkling around the island, exploring, and fishing. The cook was delighted to get fresh Mahi-Mahi, so every night, we swam home to a great dinner as a reward.
Paul
Logged
Donna
I'm Falcon Crazy
Like Count: 1650
Offline
Posts: 25,377
<3 FLY FREE "CHARLOTTE" <3
Re: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Reply #6 on:
22-Jan-12, 12:36:08 PM »
Awesome story Paul. Love under water adventures, not tragedies!!
Logged
Shaky
Bathrobe Brigadier
Administrator
Never Leaves 'Puter
Like Count: 354
Offline
Posts: 7,130
Working on my book
Re: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Reply #7 on:
22-Jan-12, 01:22:54 PM »
And to bring it full circle, cruise ships regularly visit Little San Salvador Island without incident. (not counting sunburns and limbo back injuries)
Logged
Bobbie Ireland
I'm Not Addicted
Like Count: 177
Offline
Posts: 4,661
Re: Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
«
Reply #8 on:
23-Jan-12, 06:47:58 AM »
A good piece from
The Irish Times
.
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/weekend/2012/0121/1224310565627.html
Logged
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up
Print
Rfalconcam Forum
>
Anything Else
>
Totally OT
>
Tracking the Grounding of the Costa Concordia
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
Rochester Falcons
-----------------------------
=> Rochester Falcons News
=> Rfalconcam Website News
=> Rfalconcam Now
=> Falcon Watches
=> Satellite Tracking
=> Rochester Falcon Discussion
=> Rochester Falcon Offspring
=> Rochester Falcons History
-----------------------------
Other Nature Related Information
-----------------------------
=> Falcon Web Cams
=> Raptor Web Cams
=> Other Nature Web Cams
=> General Nature Discussion
-----------------------------
Member Activities
-----------------------------
=> Birthdays
=> Vacations and Holidays
=> Events
=> Puzzles
=> Pets
=> Auctions and Sales for Fundraising
-----------------------------
Support
-----------------------------
=> Frequently Asked Questions
=> Help!
=> Camera Problems
-----------------------------
Resources
-----------------------------
=> Polls
=> Keepers
=> Files
=> Links
-----------------------------
Anything Else
-----------------------------
=> Totally OT
Loading...
Sponsored By
powered by Shakymon