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'Freak' wave rocks cruise (70-footer hits N.Y.-bound ship)
ny daily news ^ | 4/17/05 | JONATHAN LEMIRE

Posted on 04/17/2005 4:50:14 AM PDT by Rebelbase

A "freak wave" more than 70 feet high slammed a luxury cruise ship steaming for New York yesterday, flooding cabins, injuring passengers and forcing the liner to stop for emergency repairs.

The Norwegian Dawn, an opulent ocean liner almost 1,000 feet long, limped into Charleston, S.C., yesterday afternoon after it hit vicious seas in an overnight storm off Florida - then was creamed by the rogue wave after dawn.

"[My room] was destroyed by stuff getting thrown all over the place," passenger James Fraley, of Keansburg, N.J., told NBC News before embarking on the 12-hour drive home because he didn't want to set foot on the ship again.

"It was pure chaos."

The ship, which sailed from New York last Sunday with 2,500 passengers, had been due back today.

It weathered most of a wild storm that featured gale-force winds and choppy seas. But then the vessel, longer than three football fields, was suddenly smacked by the "freak wave," said Norwegian Cruise Line spokeswoman Susan Robison. It broke a pair of windows and flooded 62 cabins, she said.

"The sea had actually calmed down when the wave seemed to come out of thin air at daybreak," Robison said. "Our captain, who has 20 years on the job, said he never saw anything like it."

The tidal wave wrecked windows on the ninth and 10th floors and wreaked havoc below decks, destroying furniture, the onboard theater, and a store that sold expensive gifts.

It also injured four passengers and terrified scores more, many of whom lost belongings and were being flown back to New York early this morning.

"My daughter said people were freaking out," said Mel Blanck, 74, whose daughter, Caren Hogan, 42, of Matawan, N.J., was vacationing aboard with her family. "She said some doors were ripped off and broken glass was everywhere."

In a message Hogan left on her parents' voice mail, she said her ship "feels like the Titanic" and described "water running everywhere, with people getting hurt and panicking."

"She felt lucky that she and her children weren't hurt," said Blanck, whose daughter had called from South Carolina last night. "She's calm now, but she said it was a nightmare."

The floating city of a ship, which was commissioned in 2002, left New York a week ago for Orlando, Miami and the Bahamas. It had started heading home when it ran into the wicked weather.

During the storm, one frightened passenger called a relative who relayed the information to the Coast Guard, which escorted the ship into Charleston yesterday.

"The ocean is unforgiving; it doesn't care who is out there," said Petty Officer Bobby Nash of the Coast Guard in Florida. "This could have happened to anyone."

Repairs were done last night, and the ship resumed it's voyage around midnight after a team of Coast Guard inspectors gave it approval.

Many of the Norwegian Dawn's passengers remained on the ship while it was readied for the sea again, Robison said. The battered vessel is expected to return to New York tomorrow.

All passengers would be given a partial refund, a credit for a future trip and access to the ship's open bar, Robison said.


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; US: South Carolina
KEYWORDS: catastrophism; cruiseships; oceanliner; perfectwave; roguewave; roguewaves; storm; tsunami; tsunamis
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To: Eric in the Ozarks

We're just not used to seeing the part below the water line.


81 posted on 04/17/2005 6:42:20 AM PDT by Graymatter (a Terri Schiavo Republican)
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To: SheLion
Why are our oceans acting so weird lately?

There's nothing "lately" about it. Nature was happening millions of years before there were people to notice it.
Now we have instant world wide communications so events that few
would have heard about 50 years ago become Internet chat subjects very quickly.

82 posted on 04/17/2005 6:49:51 AM PDT by ASA Vet (FR needs a Science Forum.)
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To: Strategerist
if I didn't have to leave for a fencing tournament right now

Are there different divisions in fencing tournaments, such as "chain link," "board," "masonry?"

83 posted on 04/17/2005 7:03:09 AM PDT by ASA Vet (FR needs a Science Forum.)
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To: ASA Vet
There's nothing "lately" about it. Nature was happening millions of years before there were people to notice it.
Now we have instant world wide communications so events that few
would have heard about 50 years ago become Internet chat subjects very quickly

You are correct.  What with all the news coverage and satellites, our news teams are stationed all over the world today.  So, news becomes almost instant.

84 posted on 04/17/2005 7:13:18 AM PDT by SheLion (Trying to make a life in the BLUE state of Maine!)
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To: ASA Vet; SheLion; poobear
Good read for you!

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Rogue Waves:
Indomitable Wanderers of the Sea

wave
A 25 metre rogue wave floods the foredeck of the supertanker Esso Languedoc, 1980.

In February 1933, on its way from San Diego to Manila, the US Navy ship Ramapo was caught in the teeth of a relentless storm. The wind had slowly gathered momentum across thousands of nautical miles of the open Pacific, piling up monstrous swells: twenty feet, then thirty, then higher. On the seventh day of the storm, with the east wind howling at sixty knots, the swells grew to an average of fifty feet. Every fifteen seconds a new behemoth &#8212 large as a five-story office building &#8212 shouldered its way into the stern.

In the deep night of February 7 &#8212 around 3 am &#8212 the clouds parted, and for a moment the clear, glittering moon could be seen from the deck. The sea came alive with reflected light: splashing, roaring, tumbling. And the watch officer on the bridge glimpsed an oncoming wave: vastly larger than the rest, rushing toward them at fifty knots from astern.

The wave seemed to gather the surrounding seas into itself, into a great shadow of turbulent water. It caught the ship from behind, lifted its stern toward a towering crest, and plunged the bow into a deep, black trough. The entire length of the Ramapo &#8212 almost five-hundred feet &#8212 lay steeply along the face of the wave. The watch officer looked to the stern &#8212 buried in the wave&#8217s crest &#8212 and to the bow &#8212 plunging and spuming in the trough. He kept his wits, and noted that the ship&#8217s crow&#8217s nest &#8212 amidships, ahead of where he was standing &#8212 was precisely horizontal to his line of sight. This observation enabled subsequent calculations which showed the height of the wave to have been 34 metres (112 feet). It was 350 metres long (more than a thousand feet), with a potential energy equivalent to about 17,000 kilowatts per metre &#8212 more power than the world&#8217s largest hydroelectric dam (the Itaipu dam, on the border of Brazil and Paraguay).

It was not a tidal wave, a tsunami created by seismic events, but a storm wave generated by wind, current, and the mathematics of distance. A rogue that arose suddenly from the surrounding swells, as such waves do, and grew to twice the size of its neighbors. It climbed from the dynamic chaos of the sea, bore down on the ship, and raced onward.

The Ramapo was extraordinarily lucky. If the ship had been shorter, by perhaps as little as fifty feet, it would have slid down the face of the wave, hit the well of the trough at significant speed, and would likely have pitch-poled into a fatal capsize. A small craft &#8212 a yacht, say, or a fishing boat &#8212 would simply have been crushed by the wave&#8217s crest, which exerted something like one ton of water pressure per square foot (possibly a great deal more, if recent research predicting one-hundred tons of pressure is accurate). Conversely, a ship longer than the Ramapo would have taken the crest of the wave over the bow or stern. The water would have burst the deck open and flooded the interior. This is what happened to the Derbyshire, a thousand-foot long British bulk carrier sunk by a rouge off the coast of Japan in 1980. The Derbyshire&#8217s front hatch buckled and the ship went down, taking all 44 of its crew, in under a minute.

But the size of the wave that overtook the Ramapo, its angle of approach, and the size of the ship itself, all conjoined perfectly. The ship fit neatly into half the wavelength of the rogue, and was allowed to pass. This synchronicity of factors allowed the captain and his crew to reach Manila, and subsequently to relate the tale of what is still the largest reliably recorded wave: high as an eleven-story building, wide and long as a shopping mall. A monster wave.

It&#8217s worth noting that eight years after its encounter with the rogue wave, the Ramapo was moored in Pearl Harbor on the morning of the Japanese attack. The ship was lucky again that day: a bomb fell into the sea a dozen feet from the bow, where a crewman stood firing his pistol at the oncoming planes, tears streaming down his face. The bomb exploded into a great column of water, but the ship was unhurt. And though the Ramapo was at the heart of the action, was one of the first ships to return fire, no crewmen were killed or wounded, and the only damage was from a single, nickel-plated machine-gun bullet that was later pried from the teak base of the aft gun platform.

Five large warships were sunk during the Pearl Harbor attack. This is roughly the number of large ships (over 600 feet) lost every six months on the world&#8217s oceans. Over the last twenty years, more than two-hundred large ships have gone down. And until recently, most of these sinkings were attributed simply to “bad weather.” But at the end of 2003, the results of a European Space Agency research project demonstrated what mariners have claimed for centuries: that rogue waves likely account for a large number of ocean disasters.

The MaxWave project utilized ERS (Earth Remote Sensing) satellites to sweep the ocean&#8217s surface &#8212 through daylight, darkness and cloud &#8212 for three weeks. The sensors collected 30,000 radar images of 5 by10 kilometre swaths of the sea, with a resolution of ten metres, every 200 kilometres. The images were then processed at the German Aerospace Centre, and showed at least ten individual waves more than 25 metres (81 feet) in height. But the satellite survey was only a snapshot: each satellite recorded a radar image, skipped over 200 kilometres, then took another image. As such, the survey did not show all the rogue waves around the globe at a given time. That number would be much higher. A radar survey from the Goma oil platform in the North Sea, for example, showed almost a rogue per week in the vicinity of the rig. And the North Sea is not known for rogues.

Most large ships and oil rigs are built to withstand 15 metre (about 50 foot) waves. An encounter between a container ship or an oil rig and a 25-metre wave is thus a potentially deadly scenario. Indeed, a 26-metre rogue wave was the principal cause of the capsize of the Ocean Ranger, a drilling rig that sank off the coast of Newfoundland in 1982. The Ocean Ranger catastrophe was the worst marine disaster in Canada since the Second World War. 84 lives were lost. A Soviet container ship, the Mekhanik Tarasov, also went down in the same storm, with a loss of 33 lives.

No one is sure what causes rogue waves. Strong winds and open water are factors, as are ocean currents: like the Agulhas, off the east coast of South Africa, the Atlantic&#8217s Gulf Stream, and much of the Southern Ocean (north of Antarctica, south of Africa and South America) where the path of the ocean is unimpeded by land all the way around the globe. In 2001, two cruise ships in the Southern Ocean, the Bremen and the Caledonian star, were hit by 30-metre rogues in the same week. Their bridge windows were smashed, and the Bremen was left drifting temporarily, without navigation or propulsion.

In the Pacific, rogues seem to occur most frequently along the path of the Kuro Siwo ("blue salt") current. It runs off the east coast of Japan, and continues in a northeasterly direction to about 40 degrees north and 160 degrees east. Rogues also appear off the coasts of Oregon (where lighthouse beacons have been hit by 30-metre waves), British Columbia, and Alaska.

The National Data Buoy Center, part of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the United States, has recorded 20-metre storm swells near the Aleutian Islands. These are not rogues, but simple swells: thousands of them, marching in lockstep across the reach of a storm. Based on calculations of the relationship between swell height and potential rogue height, rogues as high as 50-metres (about 162-feet) have been predicted for the North Pacific. No waves of this height have actually been recorded, but the complex mathematics of wave dynamics suggests that waves may well reach such heights in the most severe storms.

The traditional theory that rogues are a series of waves piled on top of each other &#8212 a set of swells that have somehow fallen together &#8212 no longer prevails among oceanographers. The current view, which is sketchy at best, involves the action of currents moving opposite to wind direction, and the compression of wave fronts along eddies in the path of a current. Some emerging perspectives employ the Schrodinger Equation of quantum physics and the famous “butterfly effect” of chaos theory, in which small changes in a system create massive results. Various researchers are working on ways to further develop these non-linear ideas. But it&#8217s difficult to study rogue waves: they appear and disappear unpredictably, they move fast, and they are immensely dangerous.

Some extreme surfers try to find and ride rogue waves and colossal reef waves. In January 2002, Pete Cabrinha rode a 21-metre (70-foot) wave off the coast of Maui. No one has yet claimed the $250,000 Billabong Odyssey prize, for the first surfer to ride a hundred-foot wave, but this will likely happen with a decade. Projects such as Surfline and WaveAtlas aim to provide accurate meteorological data to assist mariners in finding or avoiding massive waves (finding, in the case of Surfline, and avoiding, in the case of the nascent WaveAtlas).

Since rogues tend to be about twice the height of the surrounding seas, one strategy for avoiding them is to stay away from wave conditions that, if doubled, represent a danger to your boat. This corresponds to a redundancy factor of two, a principle in safety engineering. In experiments conducted in the wake of the 1979 Fastnet yacht race disaster, in which 14 sailors were lost, it was found that a 12.5-metre (40-foot) mono-hull yacht could be capsized by a breaking sea as small as 4 metres, or about 13 feet. A wave of this size was a principal cause of the capsizing of the Cap Rouge II off Steveston, BC, in 2002, with five lives lost. The Cap Rouge II was 21 metres long.

Ship design standards are likely to change within the next few years as rogues are increasingly acknowledged as a major cause of marine disasters. For now, and for the average boater in the Pacific Northwest, the most effective means of avoiding rogues is simply to pay attention to the weather. But weather systems sometimes change quickly, and without warning. When at sea, watch for unusually large waves (and use radar at night, in storms, or in poor visibility). The rogue that destroyed the Ocean Ranger was visible for several minutes before it struck. This would have been enough time for a small vessel to get out of the way. When on the beach, be particularly cautious in conditions of high wind and high tide: people have been snatched from shore by rogues and carried off without a trace.

Terrifying and beautiful and majestic all at once, rogues are archetypes of the mighty and unpredictable character of the sea. They suggest an attitude of extreme caution, possibly even of reverence, in the face of something unfathomable. For many mariners, this is the chief reason for going to sea: to partake of its great mystery. Rogues embody that mystery.




85 posted on 04/17/2005 7:15:42 AM PDT by Issaquahking (.)
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To: 2nd amendment mama

ping!


86 posted on 04/17/2005 7:18:42 AM PDT by basil (Exercise your Second Amendment--buy another gun today!)
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To: Tempestuous
Bermuda Triangle?

One of the (rational) explanations for the Triangle is rogue waves.

87 posted on 04/17/2005 7:19:04 AM PDT by randog (What the....?!)
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To: Rebelbase

Bermuda Triangle mysteries come to life?


88 posted on 04/17/2005 7:19:10 AM PDT by yoe
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To: Issaquahking
Looks like a lot of good stuff here. I bookmarked so I can study this later on.

Thanks!!

89 posted on 04/17/2005 7:20:29 AM PDT by SheLion (Trying to make a life in the BLUE state of Maine!)
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To: Rebelbase

When my father took the first and only cruise in his life it was from NY to Nassau in January. On the first night the ship was pitching and rolling quite a bit and on first light he decided to look out the porthole in his stateroom that should have been 15 ft above the water line and saw only water.


90 posted on 04/17/2005 7:25:20 AM PDT by Semper Paratus (-)
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To: basil

Yup...just what we were talking about. Cruise - no thanks!


91 posted on 04/17/2005 7:39:30 AM PDT by 2nd amendment mama ( www.2asisters.org • Self defense is a basic human right!)
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To: Normal4me
Norwegian Cruise Lines lists Orlando as one of their "Shore Excursions". Must stop nearby.
92 posted on 04/17/2005 7:51:35 AM PDT by Doe Eyes
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To: Doe Eyes
Yes they dock at Port Canaveral. About 40 miles east of Orlando. Just thought it was strange that they listed cities that are actually ports and then thru in O-town.

/being picky ;-)

93 posted on 04/17/2005 8:07:51 AM PDT by Normal4me
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To: Rebelbase

94 posted on 04/17/2005 8:30:45 AM PDT by JOE6PAK ("Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity.")
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To: Quilla

That is a real photograph?

What is Chapman Piloting?


95 posted on 04/17/2005 8:33:19 AM PDT by A knight without armor
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To: Quilla

Probably from a helicopter wouldn't you think? A rescue helicopter maybe? It's a SCARY photo for sure and having grown up on the ocean we have a great deal of RESPECT for the power of the ocean.


96 posted on 04/17/2005 8:37:29 AM PDT by cubreporter
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To: Quilla

Probably from a helicopter wouldn't you think? A rescue helicopter maybe? It's a SCARY photo for sure and having grown up on the ocean we have a great deal of RESPECT for the power of the ocean.


97 posted on 04/17/2005 8:37:32 AM PDT by cubreporter
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To: SheLion

Like you...that tsunami scared the heck out of me. The really frightening part being you can look out and see a wave with NO CLUE it COULD be a Tsunami!!! Gives me the chills to think about it.


98 posted on 04/17/2005 8:39:40 AM PDT by cubreporter
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To: cubreporter

Publicity poster for "The Perfect Storm".


99 posted on 04/17/2005 8:48:47 AM PDT by SlowBoat407 (When we are tolerant, we should be careful to note whether it stems from convenience or conviction.)
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To: Rebelbase

"'Freak' wave rocks cruise"

Man. . .I thought Freak Wave was a rock group and was rocking the ship. Guess I had that wrong.


100 posted on 04/17/2005 8:54:12 AM PDT by Gunrunner2
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