NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
From: Robert Eno
Date: 2007 Apr 20, 19:00 -0500
----- Original Message -----From: PF .To: NavListSent: Friday, April 20, 2007 1:53 AMSubject: [NavList 2645] The mystery of the Queensland version of the Marie Celeste.'An unmanned yacht found drifting off the north Queensland coast had computers running and even food on a table ready to eat but no crew, puzzled emergency services say ... Queensland police have confirmed three men from Western Australia are missing. They men aged 56, 63 and 69, according to the ABC are thought to have bought the yacht at Airlie Beach and were sailing it back home to Western Australia ... Emergency Management Queensland spokesman Jon Hall said crews were puzzled by what they found because "everything appeared normal" ... "They got on board and said the engine was running, the computers were running, there was a laptop set up on the table which was running, the radio was working, the GPS was working and there was food and utensils set on the table ready to eat, but no sign of the crew," he said. "It was a bit strange.'Indeed. The Queensland version of the Marie Celeste. Now we get to the part of this story of navigational interest:'Mr Hall said crews returned to the boat on Friday morning, around 80 nautical miles off Townsville, to check if anyone was trapped inside. He said they retrieved the boat's GPS system to analyse data for clues to the mysterious disappearance of the crew. "That will now enable us to track backwards where this yacht has actually been in the last few days, and we're hoping that can pinpoint the search area for the missing crew," he said.'
Of course they could do as much from a well-kept log recorded on paper, which would have stopped when the crew disappeared, but it sounds as thought nobody expects to find as much these days.
'Meteorologists have ruled out the possibility a freak wave swept the three men overboard. "There was no evidence of a freak wave occurring in that area [in that time]," said Greg Connor, from the Townsville Bureau of Meteorology. "Weather conditions were relatively good." Mr Connor said no unusual weather was recorded in the area between Sunday and Wednesday. "There were quite strong trade winds south-easterlies at 20 knots but nothing that should have caused concern," he said. '
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