Monday, December 24, 2012

Ocean men world champion freedivers



Ocean Men is the fascinating story of two freedivers and their unique relationship to the sea.
Their goal -- dive deeper than anyone has ever gone before on a single breath of air.
For more than 10 years, world champion freedivers Pipin Ferreras and Umberto Pelizzari have been diving for world records.

Ocean Men takes you into the world of these two awe-inspiring freedivers through the use of breathtaking underwater photography, enchanting music, and insightful animation.
Ultimately, the movie allows a glimpse into the souls of these extraordinary men with the hope of transferring the magic of freediving directly to the audience.

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Vendee Globe : Enderby island on Auckland island : shelter for Bernard Stamm

Enderby island in the North of Auckland Island
(Plans in the Auckland Islands: Enderby Island to Smith Harbour Linz NZ2862)
>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

Lying in fifth place in the Vendee Globe Bernard Stamm has stopped Cheminees Poujoulat in the Auckland Islands to the south of New Zealand in order to effect repairs to his hydro generators.
He then intends to continue.
Stamm stopped on the sheltered side of island late afternoon yesterday (UTC).
After struggling to find a protected spot, Stamm is ended up moored in Sandy Bay, on the side of south of Enderby Island, to the northeast of the main Auckland island. (Vendee Globe info)

 Worsley, Charles Nathaniel : Enderby Island, Ross Harbour, Auckland Islands. [Jan. 1902]

This has offered him protection from the 25 knot northwest wind.
He has reported sightings of whales and sea lions.
The islands represented the last possibility of shelter before Cape Horn, 4,000 miles away.

 Hooker's Sealions - Sandy Bay, Enderby Island
Upper Auckland Islands showing Sandy Bay breeding colony, Enderby Island
and Dundas Island, the largest breeding area for NZ sea lions.
by markfountain52

(other photo of Graham Martin on Panoramio)

Samuel Enderby & Sons was one of the most prominent English sealing and whaling firms, active in both the Arctic and Southern Oceans. 
Also in 1830, Charles became a founding member of the Royal Geographical Society (RGS).
Charles encouraged masters of Enderby vessels to report geographical discoveries and had notable successes with John Biscoe and John Balleny, who between them discovered Enderby Land, Graham Land, the Balleny Islands and the Sabrina Coast.
Another Enderby captain, Abraham Bristow, discovered the Auckland Islands in 1806, naming one of the islands Enderby Island.

Shipwrecks have always been an unfortunate part of New Zealand’s maritime heritage.
For the castaways marooned on offshore islands, particularly in the subantarctic, life was a very grim prospect.
Apart from the trauma of shipwreck, once the basics of food, shelter and fire had been secured, and discipline and social organisation established, there was the dreadful prospect that castaways might never be rescued.
New Zealand’s subantarctic island groups lie in a semicircle to the south and south-east, and many ships that strayed into their path have been wrecked.
The islands lie on the Great Circle Route, which was used by sailing ships leaving the southern Australasian ports for Europe.
The ships dropped down into the Southern Ocean to take advantage of the prevailing westerly winds, which blew uninterrupted on the way around Cape Horn.

Wreckage and the figurehead of the 'Derry Castle' wrecked on Enderby Island, Auckland Islands. Photographed on 22nd March 1887 by an unidentified photographer; copy negative with inscription by David Alexander De Maus.
The figurehead can now be viewed at the Canterbury Museum in Christchurch, New Zealand.
The reef where she ran aground is called "Derry Castle Reef" and the bay this reef is in, is called "Bones Bay".

The Derry Castle, on a voyage from Geelong to Falmouth, was wrecked on this rocky northern coast of Enderby Island on 20 March 1887.
Fifteen drowned, but eight reached Enderby Island and eventually built a punt, which they sailed to Auckland Island and its provision depot. The survivors were rescued in June. (see link)

This cover is from the 1880 edition of Wrecked on a reef (or Twenty months on the Auckland Islands)
which was republished in New Zealand in 2003.
François-Erdouard Raynal’s epic account of the wreck of the Grafton and the five castaways’ survival on Auckland Island
helped make castaway stories important in maritime folklore.
Raynal’s account, first published in French in 1870 and in English in 1874, was used by Jules Verne for his book Mysterious island.

Links :

Photographer's amazing image reveals 'tornado' of schooling fish

 

 From TheGrindTV

An image showing a photographer standing on the sea floor, dwarfed by an enormous and towering "tornado" of fish has been an extremely popular share item on Facebook for weeks.
Now the details behind the image are being shared by Mission Blue.

The photographer is a scientist named Octavio Aburto, and the location was Cabo Pulmo National Park, a vast marine reserve in Mexico's Sea of Cortez, north of Cabo San Lucas on Baja California's tip.

The diver in the photo is David Castro, whose family helps enforce rules within the park.
The fish are jacks, voracious predators that school in large groups and can sweep across a region in such large numbers that they blot out the sun's rays.

Aburto told Mission Blue: "I think my background [as a scientist] affects what I seek to capture through my camera lens. For example, this 'David and Goliath' image is speaking to the courtship behavior of one particular species of Jack fish. I wanted to share this behavior with others and photography is one way to do that."

The scientist explained that the image, captured last month and among entries in a National Geographic photo contest, had been in his mind for three years.
But conditions and timing finally afforded the opportunity.

"I have been trying to capture this image ever since I saw the behavior of these fish and witnessed this incredible tornado that they form during courtship," Aburto said.

He added that many have asked whether the image is real or altered, and how he managed to gather all those fish together before taking the photograph.
"My response to these questions has been this--of course it is real. Fish, as is the case with many other animals, have certain behaviors that they perform when they reproduce," Aburto said.

"... One reason that the average person may not know about these fish spawning aggregations is simply that these creatures live under water. People can't see the fish participating in these behaviors, and those who do witness these behaviors via scuba or snorkel are rarely able to capture it in an image."

Aburto hopes the image will foster appreciation for the marine universe, for Cabo Pulmo National Park in particular, and will "bring attention to other successful marine reserves, especially in Latin America."
"With the help of key people, such as renowned Mission Blue founder Sylvia Earle, we can show that marine reserves are better options for coastal development. Basically, we need more Cabo Pulmos along the Mexican coasts and around the world!"

Links :
  • MissionBlue : Software rrchitect turned photographer Alexander Safonov captures breathtaking underwater scenes off the coast of South Africa

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Pointe du Raz


Pointe du Raz 22 novembre 2012 from Ronan Follic


 photo Ronan Follic

>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

Friday, December 21, 2012

Vendee Globe : crossing the antimeridian (the 180th degree meridian)

Situation 21/12/2012 19:00 UTC
The two leaders crossed the antimeridian : West meets East

>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<<
Mercator projection presents the meridians by vertical straight lines


With info from V&V & wikipedia

Points with the same longitude lie in lines running from the North Pole to the South Pole.

By convention, one of these, the Prime Meridian, which passes through the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, England, establishes the position of zero degrees longitude.
The longitude of other places is measured as an angle east or west from the Prime Meridian, ranging from 0° at the Prime Meridian to +180° eastward and −180° westward.

The United Kingdom and its former colonies established the Royal Observatory at Greenwich just outside of downtown London in 1675.
This national observatory was established as the starting location for longitude or the y-axis for the British coordinate system.

Since the United Kingdom was a major colonial power and a major navigational power of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, their maps and navigational charts with the prime meridian passing through Greenwich were promulgated and many other countries adopted Greenwich as their prime meridians.
Britain had more shipping and ships using the Greenwich Meridian than the rest of the world put together (at the time) : the British Nautical Almanac started these charts in 1767.

By 1884, international travel was commonplace and the need for a standardized prime meridian became readily apparent.
Forty-one delegates from twenty-five "nations" met in Washington D.C. for a conference to establish zero degrees longitude and the prime meridian.

Greenwich was selected as the prime meridian by a vote of twenty-two in favor, one against (Haiti), and two abstentions (France and Brazil).
By the time of the conference, the United Kingdom and its colonies as well as the United States of America had already begun using Greenwich as the prime meridian; this weighed heavily on the selection process.


The 180th meridian or antimeridian is the meridian which is 180° east or west of the Prime Meridian with which it forms a great circle.
An Anti-Meridian is a meridian opposite any given meridian of longitude : so specifically the Anti-Meridian is the 180th meridian (tthe meridian opposite of the Prime Meridian)
It is common to both east longitude and west longitude.

Vendée Globe : how to navigate to East to hit the West

Longitude is given as an angular measurement ranging from 0° at the Prime Meridian to +180° eastward and −180° westward.
The Greek letter λ (lambda), is used to denote the location of a place on Earth east or west of the Prime Meridian.

With the establishment of the prime meridian and zero degrees longitude at Greenwich, the 1884 Washington International meridian conference also established time zones, following the concepts of Canadian railroad engineer Sir Sanford Fleming (report).
By establishing the prime meridian and zero degrees longitude in Greenwich, the world was then divided into 24 time zones (since the earth takes 24 hours to revolve on its axis) and thus each time zone was established every fifteen degrees of longitude, for a total of 360 degrees in a circle.
So, it is used as the basis for the International Date Line because it for the most part passes through the open waters of the Pacific Ocean.
However, the meridian passes through Russia and Fiji as well as Antarctica.

The International Date Line can cause confusion among especially airline travelers.
The most troublesome and odd situations usually occurs with short journeys from west to east.
To travel from Tonga to (American) Samoa by air, for example, takes approximately two hours but involves crossing the International Date Line, causing passengers to arrive the day before they left. This often causes confusion in travel schedules, like hotel bookings unless those schedules quote times in UTC, but they typically do not since they must match domestic travel times, local transport, or meeting times.
Because the agreed IDL do not follow the 180° longitude in the middle of the Pacific Ocean a kind of odd daily date situation occurs.
For 2 hours every day, between 10:00 and 11:59 UTC, there exist 3 different weekdays concurrently.
For example at UTC time Tuesday 10:15, it is Monday 23:15 in American Samoa, which is 11 hours behind UTC, and it is Wednesday 00:15 in Kiritimati, which is 14 hours ahead of UTC.
For the first hour (UTC 10:00–10:59), this is true for inhabited territories, whereas during the second hour (UTC 11:00–11:59) it is only true if you count the uninhabited maritime time zone 12 hours behind UTC. 

Longitude at a point may be determined by calculating the time difference between that at its location and Coordinated Universal Time (UTC).
Since there are 24 hours in a day and 360 degrees in a circle, the sun moves across the sky at a rate of 15 degrees per hour (360°/24 hours = 15° per hour).
So if the time zone a person is in is three hours ahead of UTC then that person is near 45° longitude (3 hours × 15° per hour = 45°).
The word near was used because the point might not be at the center of the time zone; also the time zones are defined politically, so their centers and boundaries often do not lie on meridians at multiples of 15°.
In order to perform this calculation, however, a person needs to have a chronometer (watch) set to UTC and needs to determine local time by solar or astronomical observation.
The details are more complex than described here: see the articles on Universal Time and on the equation of time for more details.

The International Date Line (IDL) is linked to the antimeridian.
The advantage of having the Prime meridian in Europe is to get an Antimeridian crossing on a North/South axis the largest liquid desert in the world, the Pacific Ocean so avoiding certain habitable land.
In crossing this line there is a date change of one day : the calendar day to the east of the line is one day earlier than it is to the west of the line.
Crossing the IDL traveling east results in a day or approximately 24 hours being subtracted, and crossing towards west results in a day being added.
So if one crosses the date line at precisely midnight, going westward, one skips an entire day; while going eastward, one repeats the entire day. 

Chatham islands
>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

 Kermadec islands
>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

Line date change diverges from the antimeridian being shifted eastward between 5° S and 51°20 'S to leave in the same time zone New Zealand's Chatham Islands in the east and far north-east, the Kermadec Islands (whose name is issued from Jean-Michel Huon de Kermadec who commanded the Espérance on the Bruni d'Entrecasteaux expedition to find the lost expedition of Jean-François de La Pérouse).

This difference does not affect the Vendée Globe racers who have both sailed south of the latitude 51° 20'S when they reach the Antimeridian (around 53° S).

The establishment of the prime meridian in Greenwich in 1884 permanently established the system of latitude and longitude and time zones that we use to this day.
Latitude and longitude is used in GPS and is the primary coordinate system for navigation on the planet.
Right now, Armel and François the two VG leaders have seen the longitude stop increasing to 180° (E) to decrease from 180° (W) : they really are into the second part of the race right now and on the road back – theoretically. The reality is they will sail to home 12,000 miles more...

Note : the term Anti-Meridian is sometimes confused with Ante Meridiem.
Ante Meridiem is latin for before noon. Usually shown in English as "a.m.".
Similarly, post meridiem, after noon, is shown in English as "p.m.".
 
 The map of the world showing Magellan's Route
(view in high resolution with the BNF )
The first date line problem occurred in association with the circumnavigation of the globe by Magellan's expedition (1519-1522).
The surviving crew returned to a Spanish stopover sure of the day of the week, as attested by various carefully maintained sailing logs.
Nevertheless, those on land insisted the day was different.
This phenomenon, now readily understandable, caused great excitement and confusion at the time, to the extent that a special delegation was sent to the Pope to explain this temporal oddity to him.
The effect of ignoring the date line is also seen in Jules Verne's book "Around the World in Eighty Days", in which the travelers, led by Phileas Fogg, return to London after a trip around the world, thinking that they have lost the bet that is the central premise of the story.
Having traveled the direction opposite to the one taken by Magellan, they believe the date there to be one day later than it truly is. 

Şekl-i Amerika (America), Ottaman Empire
The map of America, also called The New World, covers the region between the 60 degree parallels in the north and south.
The lines of latitude and longitude are drawn intersecting at right angles in the manner of Mercator.

Links :