NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: Rommel John Miller
Date: 2014 Mar 23, 20:16 -0700
My big question is that few people have brought up the possibility of Woods Hole going over to help look for the lost airliner. Consider the Air France disaster a few years back in the South Atlantic on route from Beunos Aires to Paris. Plane goes down in a storm with little indication except a wide and long path where she might've gone down. The find the tail stabalizer and some other parts afloat on the surface. But the main fuselage was down some two to three miles. The search for the Black box of the flight and the location of the wreckage goes on for two years, and Woods Hole is there. They do find the black box, several bodies, and lots of debris. Now the search area for this flight is wider and longer, sure. But look how long people were looking for the Titanic and yet Ballard and crew find it after many exhaustive years and months of looking. What Ballard had that others didn't was all this high powered search equipment. Those high intensity search lights on the two unmanned sea craft that they can send down is phenomonal. And yet no one is really talking about sending the one group on the face of the planet, and even though it is over half-a-world away that could possibly find it a lot easier than planes doing soundings 3,000 feet up. The military vessels just aren't equiped for this sort of thing, Woods Hole is specialized and they haven't been asked yet. Beats me as to why.
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