Moby Dick’ captain’s ship found

Moby Dick’ captain’s ship found

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Moby dick
Moby Dick’ captain’s ship found

US marine archaeologists have found the sunken whaling ship belonging to the captain who inspired Herman Melville’s classic 19th Century novel, Moby Dick.

The remains of the vessel, the Two Brothers, were found in shallow waters off Hawaii.

Captain George Pollard was the skipper when the ship hit a coral reef and sank in 1823.

His previous ship, the Essex, had been rammed by a whale and also sank, providing the narrative for the book.
‘Pretty amazing’

The remains of the Two Brothers were found by researchers from America’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa), about 600 miles (965 km) northwest of Honolulu in the remote chain of islands and atolls.

The wooden vessel has disintegrated in the warm waters, but the researchers found harpoons, a hook for stripping whales of their blubber, and cauldrons used to turn whale blubber into oil.

“To find the physical remains of something that seems to have been lost to time is pretty amazing,” said Nathaniel Philbrick, an author, and historian, who has been researching the Two Brothers, the Essex, and their captain.

“It just makes you realize these stories are more than stories. They’re about real lives.”

The sinking of the Two Brothers was relatively uneventful compared with Essex’s run-in with the sperm whale in 1821.

After the Essex sank, Capt Pollard and his crew drifted at sea without food and water for three months and even resorted to cannibalism before they were rescued.

Pollard – who gave up whaling and became a night watchman in Nantucket, Massachusetts – is not thought to have been the basis for the novel’s obsessive Capt Ahab

Source: BBC News

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Movie Sanctum

Movie Sanctum

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The Real Sanctum
Movie Sanctum

A film centred around the do-or-die efforts of a group of cave divers.

 

The $30 million-budgeted Sanctum was directed by Alister Grierson and shot in 3-D with the input of co-producer James Cameron, whose previous hits include the 3-D Avatar and Titanic.

The film, which opens on 4 February, follows the trials of a team of cave divers who enter a large, remote cave system in Papua New Guinea.

They struggle with raging currents and an unknown terrain as they try to find a way out of their potential tomb after a tropical storm unleashes floods.

The film is both action thriller and rites-of-passage movie, a centrepiece partnership involving cave divers Frank McGuire (Richard Roxburgh) and his son Josh (Rhys Wakefield).

The cast is fundamentally Australian, exceptions including Welsh actor Ioan Gruffudd who plays the project’s financier.

Sanctum was shot in Queensland, Australia, using a Warner Bros studio with dry-cave sets and a further cave system structure in a flooded tank.

Filming employed 3-D techniques which Cameron used to produce Avatar.

Sanctum‘s co-producer/co-writer Andrew Wight and co-writer John Garvin are both highly experienced divers and trainers in open-circuit, rebreathers and cave diving.

Their experience was invaluable in bringing a sense of diving reality to the film.

The film and Garvin’s contribution to it feature in the February issue of DIVER magazine.

Furthermore, John Garvin will be talking about the making of Sanctum at the London International Dive Show (LIDS 2011) and TEK 2011 conferences, both at the ExCeL Centre on 26/27 March.

Source: http://sanctummovie.com

Map of caves: http://www.nationalgeographic.com

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Best Dive Job in the World contest

Best Dive Job in the World contest

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Scuba diving internship
Best Dive Job in the World contest

Blue Season Bali – a leading dive operator in Bali, is offering you the chance to win “The Best Dive Job in the World – a seven-month PADI Dive Instructor internship, including accommodation and meals worth over US$16,000.

No prior scuba diving experience is required, just a sense of adventure and a determination to make a dynamic change in your life. Blue Seasons Bali will take the lucky winner from the beginning diver to the coveted PADI Dive Instructor certification recognized the world over as synonymous with expertise and excellence in dive training.

How to Enter?

The contest, which started on October 30, 2010, will run until February 28, 2011, and is open to anyone 18-years-of-age or older. Entrants must submit either a 1-minute video or a 50-word essay with supporting photos answering the question: “Why do I want to change my life and become a PADI Instructor.”

Promoted in leading dive magazines in Australasia, the contest is generating strong worldwide interest with millions of viewers visiting the official website and Facebook page resulting in more than 200 entries in hand at the end of January 2011.

Pleased with the enthusiastic response, Jonathan Cross, marketing director at Blue Season Bali, explained the global enthusiasm, saying: “Everyone wants a taste of the good life. Living on a tropical island and diving every day appeals to a huge amount of people. . . .The diving lifestyle is an amazing deviation from every day, from the mundane, from the expected.”

The competition closes on Feb 28, 2011.

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“Bodies” Fill Underwater Sculpture Park

“Bodies” Fill Underwater Sculpture Park

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Roman jars
“Bodies” Fill Underwater Sculpture Park
More than 400 permanent sculptures have been installed in recent months in the National Marine Park of Cancún, Isla Mujeres, and Punta Nizuc (map of the region) as part of a major artwork called “The Silent Evolution.” The installation is the first endeavor of a new underwater museum called MUSA, or Museo Subacuático de Arte.

Created by Mexico-based British sculptor Jason deCaires Taylor, the Caribbean installation is intended to eventually cover more than 4,520 square feet (420 square meters), which would make it “one of the largest and most ambitious underwater attractions in the world,” according to a museum statement.

In doing so, Taylor hopes the reefs, which are already stressed by marine pollution, warming waters, and overfishing can catch a break from the approximately 750,000 tourists who visit local reefs each year.

“That puts a lot of pressure on the existing reefs,” Taylor told National Geographic News. “So part of this project is to actually discharge those people away from the natural reefs and bring them to an area of artificial reefs.”

Source: www.nationalgeographic.com

Jason deCaires Taylor home website: www.underwatersculpture.com

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Roman shipwreck full of wine jars found in Albania

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Divers hospitalised

Divers hospitalised

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RM Midleton search 8
Divers hospitalised

Four people have been airlifted to hospital after getting into difficulty while diving in Co Tipperary on Sunday evening.

The four had been diving at an old quarry near Portroe at around lunchtime when one man showed symptoms of decompression sickness.

Three others who had been diving in the same area at the time were also taken to hospital as a precaution.

The Shannon-based Irish Coast Guard helicopter airlifted the four to Cork University Hospital where they are currently being assessed.

A hospital spokesperson confirmed that none of the four is in serious condition.

It is not yet clear whether any of the four will need to undergo further treatment at the Irish Naval Base in Cork Harbour where the nearest decompression chamber is located.

Source: www.irishexaminer.ie

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Roman shipwreck full of wine jars found in Albania

Roman shipwreck full of wine jars found in Albania

Blog A US-Albanian archaeological mission claims to have found the well-preserved wreck of a Roman cargo ship off Albania's coast, complete with some 300 wine jars — all empty, alas. The 30-meter-long wreck dates to the 1st century BC and its cargo...

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