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Posted by on in Wrecks

WWII era Japanese submarine found off Hawaii coast  

Found Japanese subHawaii Undersea Research Laboratory (HURL) photo shows a submerged Japanese I-400 submarine discovered off the coast of Oahu, Hawaii in August. (HURL photo)
Suzanne Roig Reuters 11:37 a.m. CST, December 3, 2013

HONOLULU (Reuters) - Scientists plumbing the Pacific Ocean off the Hawaii coast have discovered a World War Two era Japanese submarine, a technological marvel that had been preparing to attack the Panama Canal before being scuttled by U.S. forces.

The 400-foot (122-meter) "Sen-Toku" class vessel â
€” among the largest pre-nuclear submarines ever built - was found in August off the southwest coast of Oahu and had been missing since 1946, scientists at the University of Hawaii at Manoa said.

The I-400 and its sister ship, the I-401, which was found off Oahu in 2005, were able to travel one and a half times around the world without refueling and could hold up to three folding-wing bombers that could be launched minutes after resurfacing, the scientists said.

The accidental discovery of the 1-400, an aircraft-toting I-400 mega sub, on the rock- and debris-littered ocean floor, some 2,300 feet beneath the surface, has solved the mystery surrounding a ship long thought to be further afield.

"We came upon this as we were looking for other targets ... It is like watching a shark at rest," said Jim Delgado, a researcher aboard the Pisces V deep-diving submersible which traveled to the wreckage.

The U.S. Navy captured five Japanese subs, including the I-400, at the end of World War Two and brought them to Pearl Harbor for inspection, the scientists said on Monday.

"It was torpedoed, partially collapsed and had sunk at a steep angle," said Delgado, an archaeologist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), which helped to fund the dive.

U.S. forces sank the submarines and claimed to have no information on their precise location, in an apparent bid to prevent their technology falling into the hands of the Soviet Union, which had demanded the ships be returned to Japan.

Other mega subs have been found in waters off Oahu and in the Sea of Japan. One in the submarine class remains missing.

The discovery of the I-400 was announced on Monday after NOAA had reviewed its findings with the U.S. State Department and Japanese government officials, researchers said.

(Editing by Eric M. Johnson and Gareth Jones)
Copyright © 2013, Reuters
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Posted by on in Wrecks
((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((( 1.      CATFISH FACTS & TRIVIA:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~  If you think this is helpful/informative/interesting please forward it to a dive buddy friend. ((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((((  This week's question:  Many movies on Christmas themes have been made for television and the cinema over the years, including dozens of versions of Charles Dickens' A Christmas Carol. Which of the following films has NOT yet been made?  Jetsons' Christmas Carol, Popeye's Christmas Carol, Mr. Magoo's Christmas Carol, Mickey's Christmas Carol  Note: To avoid duplications and any resulting misunderstandings as to the winner each week----trivia answers should only be sent to Debby at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.  ############################################################### Last week's questions: How do crabs smell?   This is a recap as it has been a while! CRABS SMELL FEAR THROUGH ANTENNULES OR if you leave them in the trash for a week   they small like hell!!!!  Delicious! Crabs smell through nodes attached to their antennae. Crabs find their food in the dark (or in the light) by something called "chemoreception". This is kind of like our sense of smell. They have very sensitive chemoreceptors (or smell organs) on their antennae and in their mouthparts and distributed throughout their body. So, crabs can "smell" the chemicals that their prey put out in the water and follow these "smells" to find food.http://www.bluecrab.info/faq.htm
The antennae on crabs are called chemoreceptors. They allow the crab to taste and smell, to find food and mates. Crabs smell things they eat underwater by detecting chemicals from food with the tufts of hairs on the tips of their antennas OR … They smell BAD after a day or two in the sun "Terrible if left in the sun for two days!!!" ha ha ha  They can also smell good depending on how they are cooked or really bad if they are dead and rotting, and they have a few other odors to be aware of!! Delicious when steamed in beer and vinegar and covered with “Old Bay”  Oh, live crabs have numerous chemoreceptor all over their body to pick up scents in the water. Crabs smell depending on:1. how long they have been dead2. what the ambient temp is that they have been dead at.3. if dead long enough they no longer longer smell. Answerers in order of Receipt:Paul Gacek  --  Footnote Man  --  paulgacek.comVTF in GSOBuster Thompson  --  Retired and doing a lot of diving  --  Blounts CreekJanice Mastriano  --  Hightstown, NJFrank Edwards  --  Harkers Island, NCMike Kreul – Sea Dive – Solomons MarylandRon Briggs  --  BWC IT-Tech Support   --   Centarl Ohio Divers  --  and the seadogs Scout and Cooper --  Florida Museum of Natural History  --  Columbus OhioDon Davis (CWO4 "Boatswain", Ret.)  --  Morehead City, NCShawn Lee  --  Rockford, ILAnnie Arena -- Absecon, NJ (our longest active answerer!!!!)  Kevin Campbell -- TRIADStuart E May  --  Director of Husbandry/Operations  --  NC Aqu at Pine Knoll Shores – AKA- Key boyJerry Leonard --  Terry's Brother  --  Morehead City, NCBrandon Berry --  Rocky Mount, NC
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Posted by on in Wrecks
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Posted by on in Wrecks

WIN FABULOUS SCUBA DIVING MAGAZINE SWAG JUST BY ENTERING!

Yep, it's true: Everyone who submits entries to Top 100 or the Gold List will be entered in a monthly drawing for August and September for a Scuba Diving visor or T-shirt. All you have to do is enter — and you can enter multiple times. Now on with the show...

It's time to cast your vote for Scuba Diving's 2014 Top 100! For 2014, we've divided surveys up into two parts, so that more divers can take part in the fun!

Part 1: Rate Your Destination

Each year, we ask the most knowledgeable and well-traveled group of divers we know — our readers — to rate their favorite destinations as part of our ongoing Top 100 Readers' Choice survey. Click to rate a destination you have traveled to in the past two years, and feel free to fill out the form for as many destinations you have visited.

Part 2: Vote on Your Faves

Even if you haven't had a chance to travel to dive in the past two years, we still need your help! The Top 100 Gold List of operators, resorts, live-aboards, beach bars, topside attractions, dives — such as best wall, shore or artificial reef — and more is a list of everything you love about diving. It's the ultimate undersea (and topside) popularity contest. Click to vote on your top favorites in all these categories and more.

Scuba Diving's editorial staff will compile the results and debut them in the January/February 2014 issue of Scuba Diving and here on scubadiving.com. And be sure to check out results from 2013, 2012 and 2011 below.

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Posted by on in Wrecks

Navy EOD Detonate Torpedo Found by Divers

URL:

http://uxoinfo.com/blogcfc/client/index.cfm/2013/9/7/Navy-EOD-Detonate-Torpedo-Found-by-Divers

 

Thatcher Island, Massachusetts Navy EOD technicians safely identified and disposed of a suspected torpedo in waters just off the coast of Thatcher Island, Mass. EOD Mobile Unit (EODMU) 12, Det. Newport was called in after two divers reported the find to the US Coast Guard (USGC).

The ordnance was detonated in place, despite the fact that marine growth on the suspected torpedo precluded positive identification. The USCG requested that the munition be removed to avoid the risk to future recreational divers who could encounter it and also to eliminate the risk of encounter with fishing nets.

[Continued at Blog]

 

You are receiving this email because you have subscribed to the "UXO News Wire Service" brought to you by UXOInfo.com - The Authority on Unexploded Ordnance Technology, News, an

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U/W Bike Race

eventsiconJoin us on July 4th for this annual event benefitting the Children's Mile of Hope.

Lionfish Roundup

eventsiconAn exciting partnership between Discovery Diving, NOAA, and Carteret Community College.

Treasure Hunt

eventsiconFood, prizes, diving, and fun! Proceeds benefit the Mile Hope Children's Cancer Fund and DAN's research in diving safety.

ECARA Event

2013Join us March 7, 2015 at the Bryant Student Center, Carteret Community College, Morehead City in support of the East Carolina Artificial Reef Association.  Click here for more info on this great event and how you can help to bring more Wrecks to the Graveyard of the Atlantic.