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New Sphere in Exploring the Abyss

Posted August 27, 2008 8:23 AM

From Health & Science - International Herald Tribune:

CUDAHY, Wisconsin: The deep is legendary for inky darkness. William Beebe, the first person to eye the abyss, called it perpetual night. The darkness is matched by the intense pressure. Four miles down, it amounts to nearly five tons per square inch. That is too much even for Alvin, the most famous of the world's tiny submersibles, which can take a pilot and two scientists down to a maximum depth of 2.8 miles. But a new submersible is being built here, and even the process of construction seems a rebuke to the darkness. The work lighted up a cavernous factory with fireworks on a recent visit. Hot reds and oranges burst into showers of spark and flame as blistering metal began to yield to the demands of the submersible's design. "Amazing," Tom Furman, a senior engineer at Ladish Forging, said after a big press bore down on an 11-foot disk of hot metal, making the delicate manipulation look as easy as rearranging a gargantuan pat of butter. The new vehicle is to replace Alvin, which was the first submersible to illuminate the rusting hulk of the Titanic and the first to carry scientists down to discover the bizarre ecosystems of tube worms and other strange creatures that thrive in icy darkness.

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#1

Re: New Sphere in Exploring the Abyss

08/28/2008 12:47 AM

Yes, Alvin always got all the press, but Sea Cliff with her 20,000 feet capability accomplished a great deal more than Alvin, but due to the classified nature of the work it has never been talked about. I do hope that someday Sea Cliff gets the recognition she is due. It was a really sad day when the U.S. Navy decommissioned Sea Cliff.

Jim Richardson

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#2

Re: New Sphere in Exploring the Abyss

08/28/2008 10:05 AM

Not the least amazing part of this is the five-fold price increase of titanium lately.

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#3
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Re: New Sphere in Exploring the Abyss

08/28/2008 3:27 PM

Titanium, I'm betting, will eventually be revealed as a key component or ingredient of something that isn't even being talked about publicly yet, but which is slated to be a major part of life in the industrialized world very soon.

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