Saturday, December 31, 2022
Friday, December 30, 2022
Scientists discover five new species of black corals living thousands of feet below the ocean surface near the Great Barrier Reef
Australian Scientists Discover New Corals of Great Barrier Reef and Coral Sea Marine Parks
The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.
The big idea
Using a remote-controlled submarine, my colleagues and I discovered five new species of black corals living as deep as 2,500 feet (760 meters) below the surface in the Great Barrier Reef and Coral Sea off the coast of Australia.
Black corals can be found growing both in shallow waters and down to depths of over 26,000 feet (8,000 meters), and some individual corals can live for over 4,000 years.
Many of these corals are branched and look like feathers, fans or bushes, while others are straight like a whip.
Unlike their colorful, shallow-water cousins that rely on the sun and photosynthesis for energy, black corals are filter feeders and eat tiny zooplankton that are abundant in deep waters.
The team of researchers collected 60 specimens of black corals over 31 dives using a remotely operated submarine.
Researchers discovered five new species of black corals, including
this Hexapathes bikofskii growing out of a nautilus shell more than
2,500 feet (760 meters) below the surface.
Jeremy Horowitz, CC BY-NC
Jeremy Horowitz, CC BY-NC
In 2019 and 2020, I and a team of Australian scientists used the Schmidt Ocean Institute’s remotely operated vehicle – a submarine named SuBastian – to explore the Great Barrier Reef and Coral Sea.
Our goal was to collect samples of coral species living in waters from 130 feet to 6,000 feet (40 meters to 1,800 meters) deep.
In the past, corals from the deep parts of this region were collected using dredging and trawling methods that would often destroy the corals.
Our two expeditions were the first to send a robot down to these particular deep-water ecosystems, allowing our team to actually see and safely collect deep sea corals in their natural habitats.
Over the course of 31 dives, my colleagues and I collected 60 black coral specimens.
We would carefully remove the corals from the sandy floor or coral wall using the rover’s robotic claws, place the corals in a pressurized, temperature-controlled storage box and then bring them up to the surface.
We would then examine the physical features of the corals and sequence their DNA.
Among the many interesting specimens were five new species – including one we found growing on the shell of a nautilus more than 2,500 feet (760 meters) below the ocean’s surface.
Researchers used the robotic arm of their rover to collect over 100 samples of rare corals and brought them up to the surface for further study.
Jeremy Horowitz, CC BY-ND
Why it matters
Similarly to shallow-water corals that build colorful reefs full of fish, black corals act as important habitats where fish and invertebrates feed and hide from predators in what is otherwise a mostly barren sea floor.
For example, a single black coral colony researchers collected in 2005 off the coast of California was home to 2,554 individual invertebrates.
Recent research has begun to paint a picture of a deep sea that contains far more species than biologists previously thought.
Considering there are only 300 known species of black corals in the world, finding five new species in one general location was very surprising and exciting for our team.
Many black corals are threatened by illegal harvesting for jewelry.
Similarly to shallow-water corals that build colorful reefs full of fish, black corals act as important habitats where fish and invertebrates feed and hide from predators in what is otherwise a mostly barren sea floor.
For example, a single black coral colony researchers collected in 2005 off the coast of California was home to 2,554 individual invertebrates.
Recent research has begun to paint a picture of a deep sea that contains far more species than biologists previously thought.
Considering there are only 300 known species of black corals in the world, finding five new species in one general location was very surprising and exciting for our team.
Many black corals are threatened by illegal harvesting for jewelry.
In order to pursue smart conservation of these fascinating and hard-to-reach habitats, it is important for researchers to know what species live at these depths and the geographic ranges of individual species.
Black corals don’t form large reefs like shallow corals, but individuals can get quite large – like this Antipathes dendrochristos found off the coast of California – and act as habitat for thousands of other organisms.
Mark Amend/NOAA via Wikimedia Commons
Mark Amend/NOAA via Wikimedia Commons
What still isn’t known
Every time scientists explore the deep sea, they discover new species.
Simply exploring more is the best thing researchers can do to fill in knowledge gaps about what species live there and how they are distributed.
Because so few specimens of deep-sea black corals have been collected, and so many undiscovered species are likely still out there, there is also a lot to learn about the evolutionary tree of corals.
The more species that biologists discover, the better we will be able to understand their evolutionary history – including how they have survived at least four mass extinction events.
What’s next
The next step for my colleagues and me is to continue to explore the ocean’s seafloor.
Researchers have yet to collect DNA from most of the known species of black corals.
In future expeditions, my colleagues and I plan to return to other deep reefs in the Great Barrier Reef and Coral Sea to continue to learn more about and better protect these habitats.
Thursday, December 29, 2022
How did a Japanese WWII submarine end up in Texas?
America’s first World War II trophy, the crippled and stranded midget submarine HA-19 awaits removal from an Oahu beach shortly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.
Photograph By U.S. Navy Via Naval History And Heritage Command
From National Geographic by Bill Newcott
After the attack on Pearl Harbor, the mini-sub washed ashore in Hawaii in December 1941.
Then came the fight over who’d get to keep it.
Aside from the wreckage of the battleship U.S.S. Arizona, now resting beneath the waters of Hawaii, it may well be the most striking surviving artifact from the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Frighteningly black and sleek, the 76-foot-long, 40-ton submarine known only by its assigned battle number, HA-19, served as part of the Japanese fleet’s vanguard, arriving at Hawaii even before the first bomb fell.
Yet this relic of the War in the Pacific sits not in Hawaii, where it washed ashore the day after that fateful morning, nor even at the Smithsonian.
If you want to visit HA-19, you’ll need to travel some 3,700 miles from Oahu—indeed, 1,000 miles from the nearest ocean—to a museum located just off the main street of Fredericksburg, Texas, a lazy hill country town of 12,500 or so residents.
Just how HA-19 ended up in a region known mostly for its peaches, pecans, and Tempranillo wine is a tale of hometown pride, outrageously inventive legislative sleight-of-hand, and the power of a famous name.
Tip of the spear
On December 7, 1941, Japan’s navy unleashed six aircraft carriers and 420 planes on Pearl Harbor.
But first came the submarines—five two-man mini subs, each armed with a pair of torpedoes meant to strike the first blows.
And now, deep in the heart of Texas, I’m standing before one of them.
Mounted against a sea-blue wall in the National Museum of the Pacific War, HA-19 looks surprisingly imposing, considering it has always been referred to as a “midget” submarine.
A streamlined hulk of steel with a single propeller, it resembles an oversized torpedo with a conning tower.
U.S. ships damaged or destroyed four Japanese midget submarines during the Pearl Harbor attack.
American patrols were stunned to find HA-19 sitting in the Oahu surf the next morning.
The surviving member of the two-man crew was found lying on the beach nearby.
American patrols were stunned to find HA-19 sitting in the Oahu surf the next morning.
The surviving member of the two-man crew was found lying on the beach nearby.
Photograph By U.S. Navy Via Naval History And Heritage Command
Because the small subs had to surface frequently for fresh air, four of them were sighted by patrolling ships and destroyed with depth charges.
But no one in command took the presence of these craft as evidence of a coming bombardment.
Ironically, HA-19 avoided destruction due to a mechanical malfunction.
The sub’s batteries shorted, emitting gases that threatened to overcome the two-man crew.
Chief Warrant Officer Kiyoshi Inagaki and Ensign Kazuo Sakamaki decided to abandon ship, swim ashore with knives, and engage in hand-to-hand combat to the death.
Only Sakamaki made it to shore alive.
He crawled onto the sand and passed out.
When he awoke, he was facing the rifles of an American patrol.
Sakamaki begged the GIs to kill him.
They would not, and so he became the first Japanese POW of World War II.
For morale and money
Pearl Harbor enraged and humiliated America.
To raise both morale and money through war bonds, the U.S. government brought HA-19 to the U.S., mounted it on an 18-wheeler, and trucked it around the country.
Crowds turned out by the thousands to see the war prize.
On a wall of the Pacific War Museum is a photo of HA-19’s first visit to Fredericksburg, in 1943, rolling along Main Street.
In the background stands the Nimitz Hotel, built by the grandfather of Fredericksburg’s favorite son, Admiral Chester Nimitz, who happened to be commander of the Pacific Fleet.
After Japan’s surrender, war hero Nimitz returned to Fredericksburg and HA-19 virtually fell out of sight.
She’d been at Chicago’s Navy Pier when the war ended, and the Naval station in Key West asked for custody.
It was displayed there for several years, then moved to a spot at the foot of the Key West light house in 1964.
“For much of that time it was in pieces,” Museum of the Pacific War president Gen.
Michael Hagee (USMC Ret.) tells me as we chat on the second floor of what used to be the Nimitz Hotel.
Like Nimitz, Hagee was born in Fredericksburg.
Also like Nimitz, he’s a military man of the first order—the former Commandant of the Marine Corps.
On its 1943 nationwide War Bond tour, HA-19 rolled through the streets of Fredericksburg, Texas.
The Nimitz Hotel—named for the grandfather of World War II Admiral W.
Chester Nimitz—is now part of the National Museum of the Pacific War, permanent home of HA-19.
The Nimitz Hotel—named for the grandfather of World War II Admiral W.
Chester Nimitz—is now part of the National Museum of the Pacific War, permanent home of HA-19.
Photograph Via Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz And U.S. Naval History And Heritage Command
In the 1980s a group of Fredericksburg history buffs were assembling artifacts for a museum honoring Nimitz when they found HA-19 rusting away in Key West.
Coincidentally, administrators of the Key West lighthouse were at the same time trying to figure out what to do with HA-19, since it didn’t fit in with the historic story they were trying to tell about lighthouses and the Keys.
They told the U.S. Navy, which retains ownership of the sub, they’d be happy to give HA-19 a new home in Texas.
And so, in 1991 HA-19 took one more road trip, 1,600 miles from the tip of Florida to the crest of a Texas hill.
But Hawaii’s powerful senator, Daniel Inouye, had other ideas.
A decorated World War II veteran, Inouye insisted that HA-19 be returned to the site of its infamous failed mission and displayed at the Pearl Harbor National Memorial.
The National Park Service, which maintains the memorial, agreed, and drew up plans to take HA-19 away from its Texas home.
But as they’ve been proving ever since the Alamo, Texans don’t roll over.
In 1994, fevered negotiations began among the Park Service, the Navy, and the museum.
Fredericksburg, it turned out, had some aces up its sleeve.
For one thing, it had possession of HA-19.
Secondly, Hagee says, “We had the funds to restore the sub.
The Park Service didn’t.”
It took some Texas-style wrangling, but HA-19 has found a permanent home in the George H.W.
Bush gallery of the National Museum of the Pacific War in Fredericksburg, Texas.
Bush gallery of the National Museum of the Pacific War in Fredericksburg, Texas.
Photograph By Alpha Stock, Alamy
The Park Service also ran into unexpected resistance from veterans groups, who resented the notion of a Japanese sub having a place of honor mere feet from the wreckage of the Arizona.
It also helped that the Texas museum gallery housing HA-19 was named for former President George H.W.
Bush, who’d cut the ribbon at the opening ceremony.
But Inouye persisted, appealing directly to then-President Bill Clinton.
“If Clinton was anything, he was the consummate politician,” Hagee says.
“He said, ‘Tell you what. Let’s all take a step back, wait 10 years, and then we’ll review it.’ Of course Clinton knew he’d be long gone from the White House by then.”
Eventually, in 1998, the Park Service gave its blessing to HA-19 remaining in Texas.
Still, the Texas legislature has a powerful Plan B in store just in case some future White House tries to move HA-19.
Somewhere in the Texas State House, Hagee has been told, is the draft of a law declaring “that no midget submarine may be transported on a Texas highway.”
And what if the feds were to arrive in Fredericksburg with a helicopter to lift HA-19 out of the state? Plan C is already in place.
“That thing is cemented into the Bush Gallery,” says Hagee.
“It’s not going anywhere.”
Links :
Wednesday, December 28, 2022
Who were the 10 most famous pirates of all time?
Read on to discover some of the most intriguing pirates stories of all time!
Pictured above is the Jolly Roger flag, a famous symbol of the Golden Age of Piracy.
[CC0], via Wikimedia Commons
[CC0], via Wikimedia Commons
From History Defined by Miranda Leer
Piracy became an increasingly common way of life for several people in the 16th century.
The period between 1650 and 1730 is considered the Golden Age of Piracy.
During this time, there were said to have been over 5000 pirates operating at sea.
Pirates may have been glamorized on screen in popular culture.
Still, images of pirates charging down from ships, looting, killing, and engaging in different bouts of violence were not particularly picturesque for those who lived in the Golden Age of Piracy.
A pirate’s life was fascinating, free-spirited, and shrouded in adventure and mystery.
But it was also fierce and full of difficulties.
Here are 10 of the most famous pirates of all time.
Captain William Kidd
Captain Kidd was appointed by British authorities to help deal with pirates but ended up becoming one himself.
Ironic!
He was born in Dundee, Scotland, and moved to New York early to work as an apprentice aboard a pirate ship.
The Earl of Bellomont had commissioned Kidd as a privateer under the authority of the British Crown to help combat French forces and other pirates.
Corrupted by his crew, Kidd had gone on to capture and plunder a ship captained by an Englishman, making him a wanted pirate and a traitor to the Crown.
Governor Bellomont engineered the arrest of Kidd by luring him back to New work under false promises of amnesty.
Portrait of William Kidd by Sir James Thornhill.
He was placed in solitary confinement for a year, where it’s said that he was driven temporarily insane.
Eventually, he was taken to England, where he was tried, convicted, and hanged.
It’s been said that Captain Kid secretly buried many of his treasures on an island before his death.
For years, many treasure hunters have carried out expeditions intending to locate Kidd’s hidden treasures but to no avail.
Kidd’s tales of hidden treasure even inspired the author Robert Louis Stevenson when he was writing his famous book Treasure Island.
Sir Francis Drake
One of the most renowned pirates in the Caribbean, Sir Francis Drake, lived from 1540 to 1596.
He was well acquainted with the art of sailing and navigation and, in 1572, was granted a privateering commission by Queen Elizabeth I.
Privateers were essentially the same as pirates, but with the government’s backing.
Sir Francis Drake
With his great ship, The Golden Hind, Sir Francis led numerous successful attacks on the Spanish naval fleets while consistently raiding and pillaging many Spanish towns.
He fought the Spanish so ferociously that he was nicknamed El Draque by the Spaniards, which means “The Dragon.”
Sir Francis Drake was among the first to make English power known at sea.
He was the first Englishman to sail the Pacific and to circumnavigate the globe.
Queen Elizabeth went aboard his ship, The Golden Hind, and Knighted him.
He was seen as a role model for the later pirates of the Golden Age.
Henry Avery
He was famously known as The King of Pirates for carrying out the most profitable pirate raid.
Henry Avery was undoubtedly a legend among pirates and remained a legend long after he was gone.
However, not much is known about Henry Avery’s early life apart from the fact that he served in the Royal Navy for some time before becoming a pirate.
Henry’s career as a pirate officially began in 1694 when he led a mutiny on a ship called Charles II.
As a result, Henry was elected captain, and he and his crew set sail around the African coastline, raiding and plundering many vessels, including French and Danish ships, which they absolved into their fleet.
Henry Avery
Henry Avery’s major haul came when he joined forces with several other pirate vessels to take down a convoy of Grand Mughal vessels embarking on a pilgrimage to Mecca.
After a hot chase and prolonged, brutal fighting, Henry Avery and his men subdued the ships.
Their bounty from this raid was a treasure valued at an estimated 900,000 dollars.
This would be worth almost 100 million dollars today.
Following his exploits, a large bounty was offered by both the British Government and The East India Company for the capture of Henry Avery.
Thus, the first global official manhunt in history began.
Though some crew members were captured, Avery was never found.
François l’Olonnais
Vicious, sadistic, and brutal.
François L’Olonnais started by raiding Spanish ships filled with treasures they were transporting back to Spain from the new world.
He terrorized Spain so much that he was popularly known as The Bane of Spain.
François quickly developed a reputation for brutality and was quick to dish out cruel and unusual punishments to anyone unfortunate enough to fall into his clutches.
François l’Olonnais
He once captured a warship in Cuba and beheaded the entire crew, except for a sole survivor who was given the task of returning with a warning to the rest of the Spanish sailors.
In addition, he was reported to have torn out a Spanish soldier’s heart straight from his chest and taken a bite, which sealed his reputation as a savage and psychotic killer.
He didn’t limit himself to raiding ships alone; he was most notable for pillaging towns.
He began attacking towns in present-day Venezuela, where he would subject residents to extreme torture until they told him where they kept their valuables.
Eventually, Karma caught up with him, and he met a gruesome but fittingly brutal end when he and his crew were captured and eaten by a native cannibalistic tribe in Panama.
Bartholomew Roberts
Bartholomew Roberts did not initially set out to become a pirate.
However, he would become one of the most successful and notorious pirates of all time.
Roberts was initially reluctant to become a pirate but was charmed by the flamboyant lifestyle of pirates, which, compared to his old lifestyle of poverty and hard labor, provided great power, freedom,
and wealth.
Bartholomew Roberts and his crew
Black Barth, as he is often referred to, was shrewd, calculating, and very audacious.
From Africa down to the Caribbean and everywhere in between, he ruthlessly hunted down, plundered, and captured over 470 ships during his career, considered a record for pirates.
Black Barth was so formidable in battle that he was considered bulletproof by most crew members.
However, in 1722, Black Barth was killed in a battle between his crew and the British Government.
His Death was regarded by many as marking the end of the Golden age of Piracy.
Calico Jack
John Rackham, otherwise known as Calico Jack, was not renowned for being an excellent fighter or remarkably good sailor.
But Jack was a smart and cunning pirate who relied on his guile to get what he wanted.
Still, he would be remembered for making his mark in history as a true pirate legend.
Calico Jack was the Pirate who created the flag that is now synonymous with all pirates; the skull with two crossing swords.
He was also the only pirate to integrate women successfully into his crew.
Jack started out plundering small merchant and transport ships.
He was initially caught but found a way to obtain a royal pardon from the governor of the Bahamas with the promise that he would not return to a life of piracy.
Calico Jack
Calico Jack began an affair with a woman named Anne Bonny at Nassau.
Eventually, he broke his promise, stole a ship from the harbor, rounded up a crew, and set sail with Anne, creating chaos wherever they went.
Jack also notably had another female pirate in his crew known as Mary Read.
She and Anne Bonny would disguise themselves as men on board to engage in pirate shenanigans.
The Bahamian governor declared Jack Mary and Anne as dangerous wanted criminals.
They were tracked to Jamaica by an English Privateer called Jonathan Barnet.
At his arrival, Jack and his crew were drunk from a round of partying due to a recent successful raid.
Unfortunately, most of Jack’s men were too intoxicated to fight, and it was even said that Anne Bonny and Mary Reed were the only members of the crew that were fit enough to put up a fight.
Calico Jack was executed, and his corpse was displayed in Port Royal on November 18, 1720.
Anne Bonny
Despite being born at a time when women were essentially prohibited from being on ships once they had set sail, Anne Bonny would go on to earn her place as one of the most famous pirates of all time.
Born in Ireland around 1700 to a considerably wealthy family, Anne Bonny was said to have had a rebellious and fiery nature even from a very young age.
Her father had arranged for her to get married to a man within their province, but Anne had no plans to settle for such a mundane life and eloped with a sailor named James Bonny, whom she eventually married and took his last name.
Anne and James moved to the island of New Providence in the Bahamas, a place that was a haven for Pirates.
There, she became acquainted and eventually began an affair with the infamous pirate called Calico Jack.
Anne ran off with Jack and spent the next couple of years pillaging and looting many vessels around the Caribbean.
Anne Bonney
Anne was a proficient fighter and would disguise herself like a man and join the men with the looting and fighting on board ships.
Anne and Jack were captured in Jamaica in October 1720, and Anne’s supposedly last known words about her lover Calico Jack were:
“…if he had fought like a Man, he need not have been hang’d like a Dog.”
Anne Bonny was sentenced to die, but the execution was delayed because she was pregnant.
She was sent to prison to be later executed after she gave birth.
Anne was, however, never executed.
Some have speculated that her wealthy father intervened and pulled some strings that got her out of Prison.
Samuel Bellamy
Samuel Bellamy, also known as “Black Sam” Bellamy, was born in 1689 in Devonshire, England.
Bellamy was not a particularly bloodthirsty pirate.
He was known to be refined, flamboyant, and possessed impeccable manners.
He once captured a slave ship and proceeded to free the enslaved people.
It was claimed that the sole reason he turned to a life of piracy was that he fell in love with a woman named Maria Hallet.
Still, her parents disapproved of the union because Bellamy was a poor sailor and, therefore, not financially capable enough to make a good husband.
Hence, Bellamy set out to accrue a significant amount of wealth that would enable him could come back to win over the love of his life.
Samuel Bellamy
Despite having a short career, he was regarded as the richest pirate in history, with current estimates placing his wealth at over 120 million dollars.
Sam Bellamy was a skilled captain and tactician.
He captained his crew to capture over 50 ships without necessarily damaging most of them.
Dubbed the Prince of the Pirates, he treated his crew and even captives fairly and respectfully, unlike other pirate captains who preferred to rule with terror and chaos.
But as all good things come to an end, Bellamy met his end abruptly, unexpectedly, and gruesomely.
On April 26, 1717, his ship, the Whydah, was caught in a violent storm.
The heavily loaded ship capsized, and Bellamy, along with his treasures and 145 men in his crew, went down with it.
Ching Shih
While female pirates were an uncommon phenomenon, especially on the coast of Asia, in the 19th century, the legendary Ching Shih went against the grain to stake her claim as arguably one of the greatest pirates of all time.
She also escaped retribution for her actions in any way, unlike most other pirates who were mostly eventually apprehended and executed.
Zheng Yi Sao, also known as Ching Shih, took over the “Red Flag” fleet when her husband, Zheng Yi, died, and she significantly grew the fleet into a confederate of 1,500 ships and 80,000 pirates.
She dominated the entire Guangdong province and controlled nearly all the criminal elements in the South China Sea.
Her elaborate network included thousands of male and female pirates, children, spies, financial officers, farmers enlisted to supply food, etcetera.Ching Shih
She was a good military strategist, fantastic administrator, and skillful diplomat.
She consolidated her authority by establishing a strict system of laws remarkably progressive code of laws that even protected female captives from sexual assault.
Ching Shih was considered an enemy of the state, and the Chinese emperor implored the aid of several naval superpower nations, including British and Portuguese navies, to help take her down.
These combined forces waged war on Ching Shih’s organization for two years but had little success taking her out.
Eventually, she was offered amnesty in exchange for a peace treaty.
She retired from being a pirate and started running a Casino instead, enjoying the full aristocratic privileges of an elite citizen.
Black Beard
Edward Teach, more famously known as Blackbeard, is undoubtedly one of the most famous pirates.
He was so notorious that he was almost a mythic figure later in his life.
Feared and admired by pirates throughout the West Indies, Black Beard conveyed a demonic persona through his image.
There were claims that he charged into battle with his long black beards lit in fire, a sword in both hands, and several loaded fuses concealed under his hat.
Black Beard
His ship, the Queen Anne’s Revenge, is one of the most famous pirate ships in history.
He commanded a pirate army that captured over 45 vessels.
It was claimed that there were treasure chests with lavish amounts of gold buried in secret locations known only to Black Beard
On November 22, 1718, Queen Anne’s revenge came across an ambush that marked the end of Black Beard’s reign over the waters of the North American coast.
After a ferocious battle, Black Beard’s crew were rounded up, and his head was decapitated and hung on the front of the ship to warn other notorious pirates to stop their treacherous lifestyle.
About centuries after Black Beard’s death, archeologists discovered the sunken remains of Black Beard’s famous ship, the Queen Anne’s Revenge, and more than 300,000 artifacts had been recovered from the site.
Black Beard has etched his name in history as one of the most famous pirates.
Legends of his flaming beards and buried treasures spread like wildfire and have been immortalized in numerous stories and movies.
Tuesday, December 27, 2022
Japan launches project to map 90% of coastal waters
Existing
maps show only rough outlines of coastal areas (top left: Western Part
of Wakasa Wan (Bathymetric Chart 6337-4), courtesy of Japan Hydrographic
Association), but new technology has made it possible to capture the
topography of reefs in detail (top right) and create 3D images (bottom
right)
The ‘Umi-no-Chizu’ (‘Map of the Sea’) project will use aerial measurement to map 90% of Japan’s shallow coastal waters (to a depth of 20m).
This is a joint project by the Japan Hydrographic Association (JHA) and The Nippon Foundation.
Regulatory, administrative management and jurisdiction issues have meant that less than roughly 2% of Japan’s coastal waters have been mapped to date.
This has held back research and technological advances in fields including marine accidents, disaster prevention and mitigation, blue carbon, and understanding and preserving biodiversity.
This project with JHA is part of The Nippon Foundation’s ongoing work to address these issues.
The project is Japan’s first to use airborne Lidar bathymetry (ALB), and aims to create ‘ocean maps’ of roughly 90% of Japan’s approximately 35,000km of coastline over roughly ten years.
So far, JHA has been unable to map these shallow waters in detail.
This project has a total budget of 20 billion yen.
The Nippon Foundation, which has been working for many years to build a foundation and develop human resources for handing over the bounty of the ocean to future generations, will use the maps created by the project to promote interest in and understanding of the ocean, especially among children.
Honshu-northwest coast : Amarube Zaki to Ando Zaki includings Wakasa Wan
USHO created in 1930
From Japanese surveys between 1879 and 1905
Relief shown by hachures and spot heights; depths shown by soundings, isolines and shading
Relief shown by hachures and spot heights; depths shown by soundings, isolines and shading
source : UC San Diego
Traditionally, topographical measurements of Japan’s shallow coastal waters (depths of 0 to 20m) have been made primarily from ships.
In recent years, it has become possible to make these measurements from aircraft, but currently less than roughly 2% of Japan’s coastal waters have been measured using ALB.
The underwater topographical information taken from aircraft is highly precise, and can be used to create much more detailed maps than is possible using measurements from ships.
Detailed underwater topographical information obtained over wide areas will be used to create a database for understanding various events that occur in the ocean, and this is expected to lead to a better understanding of the ocean in fields including the prevention of marine accidents and disaster prevention and mitigation, while enhancing research and technologies related to understanding and preserving biodiversity and environmental education.
Conceptual diagram of ALB
ALB Technology and Features
The airborne Lidar bathymetry being used in this project emits infrared and green lasers from the air to take underwater topographical measurements in areas where the water is highly transparent, to depths of roughly 20m.
This makes it possible to collect seamless data from land to shallow waters where it is difficult to take measurements from ships, and to collect detailed data over large areas with a high degree of efficiency.
Time to Protect the Ocean’s Bounty
Throughout history, people have lived with the ocean, which has brought people together and been a bridge across nations, languages and cultures.
In addition to marine resources, people benefit from the ocean’s role in the weather and climate.
Recently, however, climate change and other factors have caused changes in the ocean environment, creating an unprecedented ecological crisis and weakening the relationship between people and the ocean.
Historically, humans have used the ocean, but going forward it will be necessary for people to take it upon themselves to protect it.
This project therefore seeks to create ocean maps that also incorporate knowledge, to create ties between people and the ocean, protect the ocean’s bounty, and pass these on to future generations.
Links :
Monday, December 26, 2022
Did the Piri Reis map show Antarctica before its discovery?
While the first confirmed mainland sighting of Antarctica wasn’t until 1820, there are suggestions that a Turkish cartographer by the name of Hagii Ahmed Muhiddin Piri, also known as Piri Reis, actually included Antarctica on a map in the early 1500s.
But how accurate is this assumption?
And how could Piri have included the undiscovered continent over three centuries before it was actually seen?
While his exact birthdate is unknown, Piri Reis was born between 1465 and 1450 in Gallipoli, a peninsula in eastern Turkey.
At the time, it was part of the Ottoman empire.
At an early age, Reis began navigating and sailing the seas with his uncle Kemal Reis.Statue of Piri Reis
In 1494, Piri Reis officially joined the Ottoman Navy as a commander, leading the charge between the Ottoman Empire and Venice.
When his uncle died in 1511, Piri returned to Gallipoli and began drawing his maps and books as he began to develop an esteemed reputation for map-making.
Piri (Reis is a title meaning "admiral") did not draw Antarctica, he drew the Terra Australis which was depicted on pretty much every map during the 1400s to early 1700s.
A Whole New World
His most famous map, the 1513 World Map, and the Book of Navigation remain among the most studied pieces of early maritime navigational techniques.
His 1513 World Map wasn’t discovered until 1929 and is known as one of the oldest maps of America that exists.
The map, centered on the Sahra, was drawn on a small piece of preserved gazelle skin.
Only one-third of the map survived, but was discovered at the Topkapı Palace in Istanbul, where it is today — though not on public display.
Controversy
While the map was discovered in the 1920s, it wasn’t until later, in 1965, when Charles Hapgood published a paper about the history of Antarctica.
Hapgood, a University of New Hampshire professor, studied Piri’s map in his research and included many theories about it in his book, Maps of the Ancient Sea Kings.
His research found some interesting results that are hard to find modern explanations for.
For one, it appears that Piri Reis’ map in 1513 was drawn using a Mercator Projection — a cartography technique developed by the Flemish geographer in 1563 that is used today as the standard map projection.
This method illustrates how Earth’s cylindrical shape impacts the illustration of maps.
Since this methodology was undiscovered until the late 16th century, researchers are baffled by Piri’s apparent use of the Mercator Projection.
One possible explanation points to Piri’s different source documents that he used to create his own maps.
It was known that Piri studied 20 different maps and charts, including Greek, Portuguese, and Arabic, and Christopher Columbus even draws one.
With Piri’s in-depth study of these maps, his use of the Mercator Projection is possibly explained by the Greeks, who also used astrological and geological calculations, including latitude and longitude, to draw maps.
However, it continues to be impressive, as this type of spheroid trigonometry wasn’t widely used until the middle of the 18th century.
This proved that early map makers not only knew that Earth was round, but they were accurate within 50 miles of its actual circumference.
Piri Reis’ maps have baffled scientists and researchers as they look for answers to explain how accurate a cartographer in the 1500s was.
And even with a possible explanation for his mapping style, one aspect of Piri’s 1513 World Map remains unsolved — How did he know to incorporate Antarctica centuries before it was even discovered?
Antarctica Uncovered
As Professor Hapgood and others studied Piri’s maps, they noticed that Antarctica was included in the drawings — but was drawn without its ice caps.
This astonished scientists, as 97.6% continent today is covered in ice — and has been for over a million years, according to most estimates.
How could he have included a map without Antarctica’s ice caps?
Piri’s map is so accurate that even the in-lands and topographical representation are identical to today’s modern-day maps of Antarctica.
Some have speculated this could have resulted from alien civilization or other strange, unknown supernatural occurrences without a clear explanation.
How else could Piri Reis’s source maps accurately illustrate a continent without aerial surveying from 600,000 years ago?
One theory is that Piri Reis used a source document with information older than 4,000 BCE.
But, this would mean that an ancient civilization would have had the sophistication to navigate the world and chart the lands before any well-known language or technology.
Others who have studied Piri Reis’ map believe that aliens aren’t to thank for the early discovery of Antarctica.
But instead, theorize that a shift in the Earth’s axis caused part of South America to break off, forming what is known today as Antarctica.
The representation of Antarctica on Piri’s map is also a close representation of South America’s coastline, where Uruguay and Argentina are joined.
In his research, Hapgood offers that the shift in the Earth’s axis could have caused the piece of land now known as Antarctica to break off from South America and move thousands of miles south, where it is now covered with ice.
Scientists have dispelled this theory, though, and say it is impossible to occur.
—
From what we know about Piri Reis cartography, he included that he didn’t conduct the original surveying shown in his maps.
But instead, compiled a large number of source maps that date back to the 4th century BC or earlier.
While the historical depiction of the map is impressive, some would argue that humankind’s ability to pass down information from century to century with great accuracy is even more impressive.
While maps earlier than Piri Reis have either been destroyed or undiscovered, some argue that Piri’s map points to a lost civilization with technology greater than what mankind knows today.
Scholars generally dismiss these claims, but others argue that we should view history more openly.
The inclusion of Antarctica is yet to be explained.
But one thing is for sure — Piri Reis’ 1513 World Map is a stunning example of unsolved mysteries of our world and how much more there is to uncover.
Links :