by neufer » Sun May 19, 2013 7:34 pm
fastartcee wrote:
Come on, AstroBuffs ...it's obviously a bull's-eye target built by Klingons. They (ugly, but
very advanced) accomplished this by burying a powerful anti-gravity device at a depth of 90 +/- 3 kilometres, knowing that in a few million Earth years natural erosive processes would slowly create the desired structure. Nothing to worry about here, unless they commence testing their new hyperphoton-torpedo guidance system for accuracy.
PS. I wouldn't buy any recreation property within 500 km of the centre of the Richat structure; that would put you within three sigma of the expected torpedo impact point. (Yep, even from 700 light years the Klingon military-industrial complex is that good!)
http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/350414 wrote:
Navy dolphins find 19th century Howell torpedo off Calif. coast
By JohnThomas Didymus, May 19, 2013
<<A US Navy dolphin has discovered a 19th century torpedo in deep water off the coast of San Diego, California, during an underwater mine detection training exercise. The 11-foot brass torpedo known as the Howell was built and deployed about 130 years ago. The find is of great significance to military historians because it was one of the first self-propelled torpedoes ever built.
The US military has trained dolphins for underwater operations at the Point Loma facility since the 1960s. Dolphins have a sophisticated bisonar system that engineers still do not fully understand. 80 dolphins and 40 sea lions are being trained for mine detection, mine clearing and swimmer protection. The animals are trained to dive and locate objects with the shapes of known mines. When the dolphin finds an object that could be a mine it surfaces and touches the front of the boat with its snout, but if it finds nothing it touches the back. A trained dolphin called Ten surfaced unexpectedly and touched the front of the boat. Mike Rothe, who heads the marine mammal program, said: "It went positive in a place we didn't expect." Another dolphin named Spetz also gave a positive signal a week later. Spetz was ordered to take a marker to the object it discovered. Navy divers located the object and found it was an old inert torpedo broken in two pieces with "USN No.24" stamped on one of the pieces. Harris said: "It was apparent in the first 15 minutes that this was something that was significant and really old. Realizing that we were the first people to touch it or be around it in over 125 years was really exciting."
According to the Los Angeles Times, the torpedo was made of brass and designed to be launched from above water or underwater in torpedo tubes. It was 11 feet long and driven by a 132-pound flywheel that was spun to 10,000 rpm before it was launched. It had a range of 400 yards and a speed of 25 knots and a warhead filled with 100 pounds of gun cotton. Only 50 were made between 1870 and 1889 by a Rhode Island company, before another company began producing more advanced models. It was used by the US Navy until it was replaced by the Whitehead in 1898. Until the the bottlenose dolphins found the torpedo,
only one specimen was known to exist and it was on display at the Naval Undersea Museum in Keyport, Washington. Duryee said: "There were only 50 Howell torpedoes made, and we discovered one of the two ever found." The US Navy deployed the Howell torpedo between 1870 and 1889. DVIDS reports that the torpedo, developed by Lt. Cmdr. John A. Howell, between 1870 and 1889, was the first capable of following a track without leaving a wake as it homes in on a target. The torpedoes were considered important breakthrough in military technology at the time. Harris, said: “It was the first torpedo that could be released into the ocean and follow a track. Considering that it was made before electricity was provided to U.S. households, it was pretty sophisticated for its time.">>
[quote="fastartcee"]
[float=right][img]http://www.blueglobalmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/media/Klingon.jpg[/img][/float]
Come on, AstroBuffs ...it's obviously a bull's-eye target built by Klingons. They (ugly, but [u]very[/u] advanced) accomplished this by burying a powerful anti-gravity device at a depth of 90 +/- 3 kilometres, knowing that in a few million Earth years natural erosive processes would slowly create the desired structure. Nothing to worry about here, unless they commence testing their new hyperphoton-torpedo guidance system for accuracy.
PS. I wouldn't buy any recreation property within 500 km of the centre of the Richat structure; that would put you within three sigma of the expected torpedo impact point. (Yep, even from 700 light years the Klingon military-industrial complex is that good!)[/quote][quote=" http://www.digitaljournal.com/article/350414"][float=right][img]http://www.dolphins-world.com/images/bottlenose_dolphin_picture.jpg[/img][/float]
Navy dolphins find 19th century Howell torpedo off Calif. coast
By JohnThomas Didymus, May 19, 2013
<<A US Navy dolphin has discovered a 19th century torpedo in deep water off the coast of San Diego, California, during an underwater mine detection training exercise. The 11-foot brass torpedo known as the Howell was built and deployed about 130 years ago. The find is of great significance to military historians because it was one of the first self-propelled torpedoes ever built.
The US military has trained dolphins for underwater operations at the Point Loma facility since the 1960s. Dolphins have a sophisticated bisonar system that engineers still do not fully understand. 80 dolphins and 40 sea lions are being trained for mine detection, mine clearing and swimmer protection. The animals are trained to dive and locate objects with the shapes of known mines. When the dolphin finds an object that could be a mine it surfaces and touches the front of the boat with its snout, but if it finds nothing it touches the back. A trained dolphin called Ten surfaced unexpectedly and touched the front of the boat. Mike Rothe, who heads the marine mammal program, said: "It went positive in a place we didn't expect." Another dolphin named Spetz also gave a positive signal a week later. Spetz was ordered to take a marker to the object it discovered. Navy divers located the object and found it was an old inert torpedo broken in two pieces with "USN No.24" stamped on one of the pieces. Harris said: "It was apparent in the first 15 minutes that this was something that was significant and really old. Realizing that we were the first people to touch it or be around it in over 125 years was really exciting."
According to the Los Angeles Times, the torpedo was made of brass and designed to be launched from above water or underwater in torpedo tubes. It was 11 feet long and driven by a 132-pound flywheel that was spun to 10,000 rpm before it was launched. It had a range of 400 yards and a speed of 25 knots and a warhead filled with 100 pounds of gun cotton. Only 50 were made between 1870 and 1889 by a Rhode Island company, before another company began producing more advanced models. It was used by the US Navy until it was replaced by the Whitehead in 1898. Until the the bottlenose dolphins found the torpedo, [url=http://www.digitaljournal.com/image/149138]only one specimen[/url] was known to exist and it was on display at the Naval Undersea Museum in Keyport, Washington. Duryee said: "There were only 50 Howell torpedoes made, and we discovered one of the two ever found." The US Navy deployed the Howell torpedo between 1870 and 1889. DVIDS reports that the torpedo, developed by Lt. Cmdr. John A. Howell, between 1870 and 1889, was the first capable of following a track without leaving a wake as it homes in on a target. The torpedoes were considered important breakthrough in military technology at the time. Harris, said: “It was the first torpedo that could be released into the ocean and follow a track. Considering that it was made before electricity was provided to U.S. households, it was pretty sophisticated for its time.">>[/quote]