Methane Bubbles Could Sink Ships 101
An anonymous reader writes "Joseph J Monaghan and David May, of Australia's Monash University, have proposed a novel theory for Bermuda-Triangle-like disappearance of ships at sea: They were swallowed in giant methane bubbles released by undersea vents. Monaghan & May point to sonar of a ship wreck that's sitting in the center of a known methane eruption site, and they've developed a mathematical model that predicts how an eruption could take down a ship. Hey, we ain't talkin' bovine flatulence here..."
Not News (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Not News (Score:2)
also it said about aircraft igniting said released methane exploding and going down....
Re:Not News (Score:1)
Re:Not News (Score:2)
Re:Not News (Score:2)
The theory also works to explain airplane
Re:Not News (Score:2)
It has been suspected that the wreck of a trawler found in an area called 'The Witches Hole' NE of Aberdeen might be related to this event. The wreck is apparently sitting upright, nets and deck equipment intact in the middle of a crater. AFAIK no one has identified the ship as yet, but it looks like a late 19th or early 20th Century vessel.
But no rigs.
IIRC this theory was featured in an episode of the Chan
Re:Not News (Score:1)
Next story: a changing magnetic field can induce an EMF in a conductor.
Not new. Read about it many, many years ago. (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Not new. Read about it many, many years ago. (Score:1)
this reminds of my undergraduate days... (Score:5, Interesting)
As a civil engineering student, I visited a wastewater treatment plant. one of the unit processes involves bubbling massive amounts of air through the wastewater (to stimulate bacteria into eat the organic matter) in large open-air tanks. As a result of the aeration, the density of water is much lower than the density of the human body. Therefore, anyone falling into one of these aeration tanks would immediately sink to the bottom. My first thought (and that of many others I've spoken with) is that the aeration tanks are perfect places to murder / dispose of bodies in. You're guaranteed they'll drown; plus you've got the bacteria already there in a nice chomping mood. I have no idea how long this would take to completely dispose of a body (or at least down to bones), but it sure is an underutilized method...
Re:this reminds of my undergraduate days... (Score:5, Insightful)
guilt or innocence? (Score:2, Funny)
Or...
He HAS utilized a plant this way, has also utilized other disposal "methods", is speaking from experience, and he's trying to cover himself.
If the former, then he should be modded up as "interesting".
If the latter, then he should be modded up as "informative".
Re:this reminds of my undergraduate days... (Score:2)
> you say it's underutilized. How do you know, then ?
> > My first thought (and that of many others I've spoken with) is that the
> > aeration tanks are perfect places to murder / dispose of bodies in.
Re-read the first three words of what you are quoting.
That was his first thought.
THEN he followed up with his 2nd, 3rd, and following thoughts.
Finally, he never claimed to know anything, simply those were his thou
Re:this reminds of my undergraduate days... (Score:2)
His lack of a reply suggests that his peers have applauded his ingenuity... :-)
Re:this reminds of my undergraduate days... (Score:2)
Chuck the body/person into the lava or molten iron. Poof.
The aeration tanks don't sound very effective.
Re:this reminds of my undergraduate days... (Score:1)
Which is why they are called pigs.
As Bricktop would say: Be careful Turkish, of any man who keeps a pig farm!
Re:this reminds of my undergraduate days... (Score:1)
No Discovery Channel Down Under? (Score:5, Informative)
Looks like it was first proposed in 1981 [teri.res.in].
Re:No Discovery Channel Down Under? (Score:1)
Re:No Discovery Channel Down Under? (Score:1, Insightful)
You need a model for that? (Score:4, Interesting)
2. Unfortunate ship finds itself directly above said bubbles, weighs more than water/gas mixture and is suddenly no longer boyant.
3. Ship literally falls into the sea.
But there are many questions, none of which the article seems to answer. If these enormous methan releases exist, why has nobody every seen one? (Well, because they only occur once in a while, and they happen out at sea, and anyone who might have seen one probably now sleeps with the fishes.) More to the point, now that we think they might happen, how can we get a look at one? We apparently know where there are large methane deposits, so can we put a buoy with a camera nearby? Can we find evidence of a release on satellite photos? Can we hear them with underwater microphones? Or with seismographs? Are ships that might have been sunk by this sort of thing equipped with "black boxes" that would help us know how and why they sank?
Re:You need a model for that? (Score:2)
Re:You need a model for that? (Score:2)
Re:You need a model for that? (Score:2)
Re:You need a model for that? (Score:2)
I rest my case. I mean case closed.
-Lionel Hutz
Re: You need a model for that? (Score:2)
They certainly have. a BBC documentary called "The day the oceans boiled" (may not be the exact title) has video footage of methane rising from the sea. Not only is it rising and bubbling away for quite some time, but it's burning. The scene is shown several dozen times throughout the show, but it looks to be at least a few minutes long.
For a ship to sink, all you need is to drop it low enough for ocean to flow in on top. 20-30 seconds would be more than enough.
USN (Score:2)
Re:You need a model for that? (Score:2, Funny)
Unfortunately, in this case, it's more like:
1. Giant undersea release of methane or any other gas bubbles upward.
2. ???
3. Loss.
Re:You need a model for that? (Score:1)
This sequence of events has been caught on video for a semi submersable oil rig which 'blew out' a gas well. So it can happen artificially..
However, for it to happen naturally is extremely unlikely. First, methane hydrates in quantity sufficient to sink a ship are very rare -most occurs in very dispersed form making up less than 1% of the sedimentary volume. Second, the T/P conditions for a large, continuous deposit would have to change very rapidly indeed to get bubbles at the surface - if you only ch
Re:You need a model for that? (Score:1)
<P>
Presuming of course that someone was quick enough to unlash the lifeboats, get in them, and survive any potential surface fires that might engulf them after the boat sank?
<P>
Re:You need a model for that? (Score:1)
The original article talked about one giant bubble, but I think you have it here.. one needs just enough small ones to lower the density of the water sufficiently to cause the ship to sink in. Ships operate at pretty tight tolerances against the density of the water since it tends not to change too much. Probably only a 10% density difference would be enough to make the ship sink in until the deck was under water.
Hmmm.. sounds like an interesting way for a submarine to
Possible Naval Defensive Weapon? (Score:1)
Re:Possible Naval Defensive Weapon? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Possible Naval Defensive Weapon? (Score:1)
How wide of an area is required?
Re:Possible Naval Defensive Weapon? (Score:2)
I was under the impression that the torpedo warhead punching a sizeable hole in the ship's hull did the work.
Re:Possible Naval Defensive Weapon? (Score:2)
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Re:Possible Naval Defensive Weapon? (Score:2, Informative)
You can read a thorough description, and see daigrams, here [fas.org]
Re:Possible Naval Defensive Weapon? (Score:1)
It's too much for me (Score:3, Funny)
Re:It's too much for me (Score:2)
That's a troll? Are there hordes of mutant water-breathing ship sinking killer farting cows reading Slashdot that might be offended?
Re:It's too much for me (Score:2)
Re:It's too much for me (Score:2)
Re:It's too much for me (Score:1)
Our chief weapon is flatulence. Flatulance and mass... Our two weapons are flatulence and mass... and sensory bristles. Wait. Our three weapons are flatulence, mass and sencory bristles... and an almost complete lack of natural predators...
Sorry, I'll come in again...
Just checkin... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Just checkin... (Score:2)
Skepdic (Score:3, Informative)
Seriously, the methane angle has already been proposed a long time ago. And anytime you hear something fantasitical, you should at least consult the skepdic site to see what rational people are thinking. Here's [skepdic.com] the link for Bermuda Triangle accidents. Most skeptics think pirates are the real cause of disappearances.
GMD
Plausible, but... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Plausible, but... (Score:2)
Another source of methane bubbles (Score:2)
Re:Another source of methane bubbles (Score:2)
'Whale flatulance stuns scientists' indeed
Well, If they think that this could explain (Score:1)
1. If they find any, they may be able to determine what cause it to sink.
2. If they find any, they can prove that they didn't just disappear.
3. Even if they don't find any, maybe they can determine if there is a large deposite of methane in that area.
What the heck, it would give them something to do, and maybe lead to other research involving the ocean.
Woooh! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Woooh! (Score:2)
So that..... (Score:2)
Sure...sure... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Sure...sure... (Score:2)
Shouldn't that be whale flatulence? (Score:2)
Re:Shouldn't that be whale flatulence? (Score:2)
From the article: "...the Australian Antarctic Division scientists have developed a method that allows them to collect whale feces and study its DNA to figure out what the whale recently consumed. "
Quick! Patent that
Silly (Score:5, Insightful)
It's just one of those weird cultural meme's that people shouldn't waste time trying to explain.
Re:Silly (Score:2)
Not only does the area get alot of traffic, but it's been a haven of pirates for at least the last four centuries. yeesh.
Re:Silly (Score:1)
However, it is entirely likely that there are the same number of unsolved boat sinkings in other areas as well, but the Bermuda triangle just happened to have a rash of them at some point.
Re:Silly (Score:1)
I once saw a show where they picked a random part of the ocean near Europe which had the same traffic patterns as the Bermuda area. They then looked at all the past maritime records they could find and found the same percentage of unsolved accidents. The myth began from all the books written about the famous Flight 19 [unmuseum.org] incident and jus
Methyl-Hydrate (Score:4, Interesting)
"The ice-like methane deposits can break off and become gaseous as they rise, creating bubbles at the surface."
Pretty pathetic that this "scientist" just rehashes a decades-old theory dealing with methyl-hydrate, without even calling it by name.
One cool thing about the program on Discovery that others have already mentioned, is that they show a chunk of the stuff that a guy pulled up from the bottom... he lit it while holding it in his hand!
Flaming snowballs are cool!
(literally!)
Re:Methyl-Hydrate (Score:1)
Smoking really can kill (Score:2)
Explains the planes also (Score:1)
Re:Explains the planes also (Score:1)
one word explains why you are wrong: (Score:2)
Re:Explains the planes also (Score:2)
Re:Explains the planes also (Score:1)
Re:Explains the planes also (Score:1)
If they had emergency oxygen, they might have to be quick witted. I don't think they cover this in pilot training. Pressure loss, yeah. Large clouds of unexpected flatulence, nope.
And as the other guy said, 'bang'
Y'know, I was gonna say something sarcastic (Score:2)
Depends on the plane, but even pressurized aircraft feed their systems on outside air and pilot oxygen systems are usually supplemental rather than 100%. Low-altitude aircraft don't bother with pressurization or oxygen.
If either one took a slug of combustible mixture into the cabin and someone had a cigarette, kiss the craft goodbye.
Re:Explains the planes also (Score:1)
Obligatory... (Score:3, Funny)
I, for one, welcome our new flatulent ship-eating overlords.
Satan.... (Score:1)
Speaking of flatulence (Score:2)
re: Methane Bubbles Could Sink Ships (Score:1)
Yeah, but... (Score:2)
Re:Yeah, but... (Score:2)
Where o reporters get this stuff (Score:2)
Both guys work in areas associated with modeling and fluid dynamics so you can see that they might have been associated with it but if it was good enough to get into the news you'd think they would have some reference to it on their sites or their schools sites.
Thats what they said.This is what they mean (Score:2)