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Mystery of monster waves solved
Electronic Telegraph ^ | January 6, 2002 | By Tony Paterson in Berlin

Posted on 01/05/2002 6:49:34 PM PST by aculeus

GERMAN scientists claim to have explained the mystery behind so-called monster waves - the term given by oceanographers for near-vertical breaking seas up to 120ft high. Such seas are thought to have sunk more than 200 supertankers and container ships without trace during the past two decades.

Often dismissed as sailors' yarns, monster waves have terrified seafarers for centuries and provided the raw material for countless novels and films including Sebastian Junger's recent best-seller The Perfect Storm.

Yet until now scientists and oceanographers had been unable to determine exactly what formed such gigantic "one-off" seas that are capable of breaking a 600ft-long ship in half and sending it to the bottom within seconds.

A team of oceanographers at the Technical University in Berlin has now managed to explain the phenomenon with the aid of computers and by simulating monster waves in a tank.

"Our wave experiments have proved for the first time that monster waves are physically possible and that they really do exist," said Prof Gunther Clauss, who led the team of scientists.

"This represents a breakthrough for the shipping and oil industries because we can now start to design structures that can cope with these monsters," he added.

Using a computerised, hydraulically powered wave-making machine in a specially designed tank supplied by oceanographers at Hanover University, Prof Clauss's team has established that monster waves can occur with little or no warning.

The waves are created in a storm when slow-moving waves are caught up by a succession of faster waves travelling at more than twice their speed. "What happens then is that the waves simply pile up on top of each other to create a monster," said Prof Clauss.

"The result is an almost vertical wall of water which towers up to 120ft in height before collapsing on itself. Any vessel caught by one of these has little chance of surviving."

Photographs of the experiments show the monster wave building into a vertical wall of water before exploding into an uncontrollable boiling mass as it collapses on itself.

"Even in the tank the effect was awe-inspiring," said Prof Clauss. "The exploding wave was so powerful that it broke through the ceiling of the building in which the tank is located," he added.

Monster waves are thought to have caused the loss of at least 200 "super carriers" or ships measuring more than 600ft in length on the world's oceans over the past 20 years. The unexplained disappearance of many smaller vessels including trawlers and yachts could put the total number of losses much higher.

Yet accounts by seamen who have witnessed such waves are comparatively rare. One, dating from 1995, was when the QE2 was hit by a hurricane on a crossing to New York.

She survived what was estimated to be a 95ft high wave which the ship took directly over her bow. Her captain, Ronald Warwick, described the phenomenon as "like going into the White Cliffs of Dover".

One of the few small-boat sailors to survive a monster wave was the British yachtsman, Brigadier Miles Smeeton, who did so twice. His 50ft ketch, Tzu Hang was dismasted twice by such waves while attempting to round Cape Horn in the 1950s - once after being "pitchpoled", toppled stern over bow.

In Germany, the horrors of monster waves have been brought right up to date after revelations about the near-sinking of the German Antarctic cruise liner Bremen in the south Atlantic last year. The ship with 137 passengers aboard was hit by a 114ft wave in March while heading towards make Rio de Janiero after an Antarctic cruise.

The impact smashed windows on the bridge and cut the ship's electricity supply. The vessel drifted engineless for more than half an hour heeling at an angle of 40 degrees in huge seas whipped by hurricane-strength winds.

"I have been at sea for 48 years, but never have I experienced such a wave," said the Bremen's captain, Heinz Aye, 65, who is now retired.

Prof Clauss said that his team's research would help naval architects in their efforts to construct ships and oil platforms that were capable of withstanding such freak wave forces.

"In many cases it is as simple as building a bridge on a ship that is not slab-sided but rounded, so it can cope with being hit by a monster wave. Most ships plying the oceans right now are not built along these lines," he said.

The team also hopes that its research will help in the development of radar that is specifically designed to warn of sea conditions that could produce the monster-wave phenomenon.

"This could help the captains of ships to steer clear of a danger area, but the truth is we can do nothing to prevent monster waves. They are a product of nature," Prof Clauss added.


TOPICS: Front Page News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: monsterwaves; perfectwave; roguewave; roguewaves; techindex; tsunami; tsunamis
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To: aculeus
Meteorologists and oceanographers estimate that the waves in the "Perfect Storm" were consistently over 100 feet high. They don't know for sure what sank the Andrea Gail, but the evidence for such huge waves is there.

The awesome power of the Deep has to instill in man a sense of his true insignificance, and restore to him his proper humility.

121 posted on 01/06/2002 6:48:50 PM PST by IronJack
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To: Rebelbase
AWESOME. This is a good shot too.


122 posted on 01/06/2002 6:52:32 PM PST by finnman69
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To: fish hawk
I remember hearing of this tragedy recently. I'm so sorry about the death of your son-in-law and the other gentleman. I will pray for your family tonight. My husband is a captain and I know how unforgiving the ocean can be especially the Northern CA waters in the winter.
123 posted on 01/06/2002 6:58:50 PM PST by pbear8
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To: fish hawk
I remember hearing of this tragedy recently. I'm so sorry about the death of your son-in-law and the other gentleman. I will pray for your family tonight. My husband is a captain and I know how unforgiving the ocean can be especially the Northern CA waters in the winter.
124 posted on 01/06/2002 7:00:05 PM PST by pbear8
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To: fish hawk
I remember hearing of this tragedy recently. I'm so sorry about the death of your son-in-law and the other gentleman. I will pray for your family tonight. My husband is a captain and I know how unforgiving the ocean can be especially the Northern CA waters in the winter.
125 posted on 01/06/2002 7:09:53 PM PST by pbear8
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To: d4now
"You be careful come this spring - ya' hear?"

You can count on that, thanks!
If you ever saw the movie Mutiny on the Caine (a Destroyer also)
there is a scene on the bridge where Bogart (the captain)
loses it and is removed from the deck by the 2nd in command.
That particular scene, on the bridge, with the storm tossing and turning the ship about,
is the closest thing I have seen to what I experienced.
126 posted on 01/06/2002 7:12:13 PM PST by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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To: fish hawk
"Prayers are welcome."

Sending prayers for those lost at sea.
127 posted on 01/06/2002 7:14:48 PM PST by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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To: pbear8
There was a commercial crabbing boat, that overturned off of the Coast of Southern Oregon in December,
on the 1st day of crabbing season and all 4 crew were lost.
God Rest Their Souls
128 posted on 01/06/2002 7:19:18 PM PST by 68-69TonkinGulfYachtClub
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To: finnman69

This is what a $100 million dollar loss looks like thanks to a Typhoon.

129 posted on 01/06/2002 7:20:39 PM PST by finnman69
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
Straits of Malaca...worst seas I've ever been in. Even beat the typhoon off of the PI.
We hit something like 47-47.5 too, green water on the bridge windows, sub-chasing tin can frigate. The whole ship shuddered at the bottom of every trough.
130 posted on 01/06/2002 7:24:13 PM PST by philman_36
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To: CWRWinger
No problem.
131 posted on 01/06/2002 7:24:41 PM PST by philman_36
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To: aculeus;tech_index
Fascinating thread!

To find all articles tagged or indexed using tech_index

Click here: tech_index

132 posted on 01/06/2002 10:16:15 PM PST by Ernest_at_the_Beach
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To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
I wrote this poem many years ago for my Uncle and Aunt when my cousin was lost at sea while crab fishing out of Crescent City Calif. (March 1970)

DOWN TO THE SEA

Down to the sea in ships they go
these chosen men of steel
Though mist and foam and northwest wind
is pounding at the keel
Still defiant for they know
whatever the future brings
Their place is made somewhere divine
within the realm of kings
So sail they must each crispy morn
away from trees and sod
The sea may own their windburned flesh
but their souls belong to God.

133 posted on 01/06/2002 11:36:52 PM PST by fish hawk
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To: fish hawk
Sorry to hear about your son-in-law's loss at sea. Best wishes for your daughter and family.
134 posted on 01/07/2002 8:15:06 AM PST by Looking for Diogenes
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To: RGSpincich
Thanks for the info: "to hear that the APOLLO SEA was the 90th bulk carrier lost in the past 6 years." (From '94). I'm surprised. I'd thought we hear about every sinking.
135 posted on 01/08/2002 3:37:56 AM PST by Kermit
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To: aculeus
If I had to hang out on sea duty I think I'd prefer being a submariner after listning to all this.
136 posted on 09/17/2003 6:32:36 PM PDT by Centurion2000 (Islam : totalitarian political ideology / meme cloaked under the cover of religion)
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