Older than they thought. Definitely more than 6,000 years
Pages
▼
Thursday, November 29, 2012
Monday, November 26, 2012
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Vendee: 7th boat withdraws after collision
Vincent Riou aboard PRB collided with a harbor buoy in the dark some 500 miles from land. He later withdrew. There was a one meter gash in the hull and a whisker pole outrigger was fatally compromised. It's an easy repair in the yard - but outside assistance is disqualifying in the Vendee Globe. Only 13 of the 20 starters are still racing after only 15 days out, with the fleet just nearing Brazil. - gwc
"At 0700hrs (French time) on Saturday morning, Vincent Riou (PRB) warned his shore team that he had collided with a floating object. The skipper was at his navigation station at the time was able to get on the deck immediately after the impact and see that the object that had struck PRB was a harbour buoy (a large metal buoy). Following the collision, Riou found that the hull of his boat was torn and delaminated for about one metre. The impact was on the starboard side of the boat and the torn area is three metres from the bow. Riou was not injured in the collision. He will wait until daybreak to assess the damage and the possibility of repair. Conditions in the area are good and the wind between 12 and 15 knots. At the moment of impact, Riou immediately called the race office in order to report the position of the buoy to other competitors."
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Gutek Retires from the Race - Vendée Globe 2012-2013
Zbigniew Gutkowski (Energa) is the sixth skipper to retire from the Vendee Globe. It is day 11. 14 boats are still racing.
Gutek Retires from the Race - Vendée Globe 2012-2013:
'via Blog this'
Gutek Retires from the Race - Vendée Globe 2012-2013:
“Having no autopilot means I can’t race, and if I can’t race, I have to retire. When I joined the Vendée Globe I was not interested in being the 15thth skipper to finish. That’s a tough decision, one of toughest in my life. But that’s Vendee Globe, that’s the power of the ocean and you can’t fight it.
“I cannot go without an autopilot in the Southern Ocean, that is impossible. I need to keep the boat in one piece I don’t want to lose it and maybe my life in the Southern Ocean.”
”It’s like driving at night on a road you don’t know, a road with many turns, surrounded with trees. Suddenly your lights go off and you can’t slow down. How many chances do you have to survive? That’s what is happening with my autopilot, if you replace the road and the trees with the ocean and the waves.”
'via Blog this'
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Vendee - Day 10 - 5 down. Alex Thomson's rudder repair
Alex Thomson on Hugo Boss |
L'incroyable réparation d'Alex Thomson by VendeeGlobeTV
Monday, November 19, 2012
Friday, November 16, 2012
Samantha Davies `Saveol' dismasted
The only woman in the race, Davies is now out of it. There is no returning - anyone receiving outside assistance is disqualified.
Savéol dismasted - Vendée Globe 2012-2013:
Samantha Davies waits for the storm to abate before setting up a jury rig. |
Tuesday, November 13, 2012
Vendee Globe - the fun part
Mike Golding on a screaming reach.
Caméra embarqué à bord de Gamesa - Take a tour... by VendeeGlobeTV
Caméra embarqué à bord de Gamesa - Take a tour... by VendeeGlobeTV
Monday, November 12, 2012
Vendee Globe - 3 days out - 2 boats down
Twenty started the Vendee Globe three days ago but already two boats are limping home. The rules are very simple: if your boat meets the design specs and you have done the qualifying voyages you head out - single-handed - from Les Sables d'Olonne, France, round the great capes and return to port - without outside assistance.
Kito De Pavant and Marc Guillemot have both withdrawn. Guillemot hit something and lost his canting keel. DePavant was napping when he collided with a trawler which had not activated its AIS (automatic identification system) which would have sounded an alarm giving DePavant warning to change course.
Day 3 highlights - Monday, November 12, 2012 by VendeeGlobeTV
Kito De Pavant and Marc Guillemot have both withdrawn. Guillemot hit something and lost his canting keel. DePavant was napping when he collided with a trawler which had not activated its AIS (automatic identification system) which would have sounded an alarm giving DePavant warning to change course.
Day 3 highlights - Monday, November 12, 2012 by VendeeGlobeTV
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Friday, November 2, 2012
Thursday, November 1, 2012
The 2011 Report That Predicted New York's Subway Flooding Disaster - Commute - The Atlantic Cities
The 2011 Report That Predicted New York's Subway Flooding Disaster - Commute - The Atlantic Cities: "Last fall, as part of a massive report on climate change in New York, a research team led by Klaus Jacob of Columbia University drafted a case study that estimated the effects of a 100-year storm on the city's transportation infrastructure. Considering MTA Chairman Joseph Lhota’s comments today that Hurricane Sandy's impact on the subway was "worse than the worst case scenario," it seems pretty safe to put Sandy in the 100-year category. In that case, assuming the rest of the report holds true, the subway system could be looking at a recovery time of several weeks, with residual effects lasting for months and years.
The researchers modeled a potential 100-year storm that consisted of either a category 1 or 2 hurricane hitting nearby, or a severe nor’easter that coincided with high tide. (As we know now, Sandy was a hybrid of all three events.) The models predicted complete flooding of several tunnels after such an event, including all the tunnels in the East River:"
'via Blog this'
The researchers modeled a potential 100-year storm that consisted of either a category 1 or 2 hurricane hitting nearby, or a severe nor’easter that coincided with high tide. (As we know now, Sandy was a hybrid of all three events.) The models predicted complete flooding of several tunnels after such an event, including all the tunnels in the East River:"
'via Blog this'
Manhattan's flooded zone is landfill
Most of Sandy-flooded lower Manhattan is landfill. There is a lot more Manhattan than there used to be. The Battery was just that - and it was on two near-shore islands. The entire area west of the World Trade Center is recent fill - much of it from the No. 3 water tunnel still being excavated.
Compare the Manhattan evacuation map to a 1776 map of the island before the filling started. Basically - if it is red it is fill. The eastern line of Zone A along the Hudson River runs along Greenwich Street on the west, which was at the waterfront in 1776. The old slips on the East River extend inland to Queen Street, now Pearl Street, which is near where Zone A runs along the East River.
Click through HERE for an interactive Google map in the TPM post which is the source of this post.
Click through HERE for an interactive Google map in the TPM post which is the source of this post.