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Moby Dick' captain's ship found

  • 20-02-2011 9:47pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 10


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    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, was 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) north-west 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 realise these stories are more than stories. They’re about real lives."
    The sinking of the Two Brothers was relatively uneventful compared with the 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 gave up whaling and became a night watchman in Nantucket, Massachusetts.While Meville was inspired by Pollard’s adventures, the unlucky seafarer’s character is not thought to have been the basis for the novel’s obsessive Capt Ahab.


    The original story can be found on http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-12439656



    I posted this article on our dive story site too - http://www.myscubastory.com/ - for anyone who likes a good dive story or two!


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 382 ✭✭tedshredsonfire


    In the heart of the sea is possibly the best book on the Essex and poor Capt Pollard. Really brings you right into the middle of the pacific and descibes what must have happened horrificly well.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,512 ✭✭✭BigDuffman


    Is it just me or does the diver inside you always steam when they don't give you the depth!!!? Not that will be going there soon, but its nice to have those "I could dive that!" dreams


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 10 yannick1


    Hey there - I heard that its quite a shallow dive ! Under 15m deep !


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