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    Never before published photos of Edmund Fitzgerald

    Not war related obviously, but certainly historical.
    For those who don't know, the Edmund Fitzgerald was a large cargo ship that went down in a viscous storm in lake Superior some 35 years ago, all hands lost.
    It has grown into quite a legend in the midwest USA, and internationally, with Gordon Lightfoots haunting song about it.

    It has not been determined exactly why she sank, and probably never will be.
    Evidence suggests that a freak pair of monster waves lifted it out of the water by the stern & bow ,,, It was briefly unsupported in the center, which caused the ships structure to buckle, then massively fail.

    This guy here made half a dozen dives and took 1,000's of pics.
    [In a 2 man submersible - At 500 ft +, far, far too deep for scuba dives].
    He apparently had the intention of publishing a book, but ran into a bunch of controversy with other divers and family members of the ill fated crew.
    He became a bit jaded, and has been sitting on these pics for years.
    Here they are for those interested.

    http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/gallery?Site=C4&Date=20101106&Category=NEWS&ArtNo= 11060810&Ref=PH&Params=Itemnr=1

    #2
    Quite interesting. That must have been one heckuva storm to have sent that big of a ship to the bottom without them being able to call out on the radio.

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      #3
      Yep, a monster winter gale with hurricane force winds, waves up to 35ft.

      I just learned that 2 guys actually did scuba dive on it - I didn't think that was possible to go that deep.
      200 ft is considered crazy deep by most divers, only a select few go even that deep.
      I thought twice that far was out of the question, but apparently not.

      http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/...-lake-superior

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by JamesUS View Post
        Yep, a monster winter gale with hurricane force winds, waves up to 35ft.

        I just learned that 2 guys actually did scuba dive on it - I didn't think that was possible to go that deep.
        200 ft is considered crazy deep by most divers, only a select few go even that deep.
        I thought twice that far was out of the question, but apparently not.

        http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/...-lake-superior

        W/ mixed gas rigs, about 1 second on the bottom and some serious decompression time it is possible...but crazy deep IMO

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          #5
          Insane crazy deep, not many would have the gnads to try it.
          I think they spent about 3 minutes on the bottom after a 30 minute descent ... And spent 3 hours coming back up.
          Probably did it just to show that it was possible, more than anything ,,, A feat like that is not going to be often repeated with present technology.

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