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Science

HMS Beagle (Possibly) Found 435

With the Beagle 2 lander lost on Mars, good Beagle-related news has been lacking, until now. British paper The Observer is reporting that the original HMS Beagle, the ship Darwin travelled on during his famous voyage, may have been found. Marine archeologists believe they have found the ship, which has been resting at the bottom of some Essex marshes for the last century.
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HMS Beagle (Possibly) Found

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  • by lostchicken ( 226656 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:09AM (#8294335)
    Now we just need to find the other Beagle. Wouldn't it be great if we found that one at the bottom of some ocean?
  • by J. Jacques ( 708438 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:10AM (#8294342) Homepage
    "Hooray! Oh. Wait. Crap."
  • by joshua404 ( 590829 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:11AM (#8294353)
    Snoopy was found dead in a Vegas hotel room, at the bottom of the tub. CSI Gil Grissom suspects foul play as several small, yellow feathers were found at the scene.
    • by s.d. ( 33767 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:46AM (#8294739)

      CSI Gil Grissom suspects foul play as several small, yellow feathers were found at the scene.

      You meant fowl play, right?

    • by orthogonal ( 588627 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @12:39PM (#8295312) Journal
      If you're going to do, it, do it right! There's a canonical form, which I'll demonstrate (it should be available at Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] except some troll changed it; I'll fix it tonight) :

      Sad news ... Snoopy, dead at 54

      I just heard some sad news on talk radio - Comic strip beagle/World War I flying ace Snoopy was found dead in his doghouse this morning. There weren't any more details. I'm sure everyone in the Slashdot community will miss him - even if you didn't enjoy his work, there's no denying his contributions to popular culture. Truly an American icon.


      When I die, this is how I want to be memorialized.
  • by TasosF ( 670724 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:11AM (#8294355) Homepage
    ...and it was on this planet.
    • ...and it was on this planet.

      Everyone had been looking where the light was better until recently.

  • However... (Score:5, Funny)

    by FarmerDave ( 739062 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:13AM (#8294372)
    It's *still* not responding to signals.
  • by CaptainAlbert ( 162776 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:13AM (#8294382) Homepage
    Hang on. If European engineering can produce something that will survive 150 years in Essex, landing a buggy on Mars should be peanuts in comparison. What went wrong?
  • I wonder... (Score:5, Funny)

    by somethinghollow ( 530478 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:14AM (#8294390) Homepage Journal
    Apparently the ship has undergone some sort of specialization to allow it to be a marsh-submarine instead of its original function of water-floater. This is truly an acomplishment for Darwinian evolution.

    Soon, I'm sure examples such as this will crop up all over, as ships start to pass on their abilities to survive under marshes to their offspring.
  • by FooGoo ( 98336 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:14AM (#8294396)
    Darwin doing on Mars? Wait a second...did he come back from the Galopagos via the Bermuda Triangle? I think we may have solved the mystery of all the crap that goes missing down there.
    • Maybe the Mars Rovers will stumble accross some missing ships from the Burmuda Triangle.
    • by ehiris ( 214677 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:24AM (#8294520) Homepage
      I think we may have solved the mystery of all the crap that goes missing down there.

      That "mystery" has already been solved. Statistically there are less ships and aircrafts gone missing there then in other regions of the Atlantic. For example the Atlantic is a lot more dangerous close to the Spanish coast.
      • by Anonymous Coward
        >For example the Atlantic is a lot more dangerous close to the Spanish coast.

        No one expects the Spanish Inquisition!
      • by Tassach ( 137772 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @12:27PM (#8295183)
        There you go trying to bring facts into it again. People don't want to be told the real facts, they want to be told pleasant lies which support their preconcieved notions.

        If people were swayed by facts, or were even capable of recognizing them, superstition would have died centuries ago and most politicians would be unsuccessfully trying to sell used cars instead of feeding at the public trough.

    • Yep, and then NASA will start building interplanetary boats that suddenly shoot up into the air due to poor design and tolerances.
  • by millahtime ( 710421 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:15AM (#8294409) Homepage Journal
    "who knows what remnants of Darwin's trip may still lie down there"

    I doubt there will be anything of Darwins on board. It did many things after his travels in it and was eventualy stripped down by someone else. It's like getting a used car with several owners before you. Will you really find anything worth wild from the first owner. Maybe an old green fry in the seat. Who wants that.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:20AM (#8294478)
    Is there any evidence of life in Essex?
  • by CausticWindow ( 632215 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:21AM (#8294481)

    Any right thinking Christian in this country knows that the whole Beagle voyage was a scam. There was no Beagle, Darwin was a heretic ponce at best, 'evilution' (sick) is self masturbation by atheists.

    There can only be one nation under God. And if gays are allowed to marry, we might start a backwards evolution into snails and other amoral beings.

    Thank you, amen and God bless America, Christian science and the GOP.

  • by craw ( 6958 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:21AM (#8294482) Homepage
    don't let James Cameron get anywhere close to this wreck! Don't give him any ideas!
  • "What's the Beagle look like?"
    "There's a picture of it here."
    "What's that coming out of it?"
    "Lightning, Wrath of God type stuff."
    "Bush is said to be a nut about this stuff. He's got teams out searching for it."
    "The army that carries the Beagle in front of it is invincible"

  • by gertsenl ( 719370 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:27AM (#8294548)
    The missing notes from his trip:

    "Truly we can see God's works through this evolution. I feel my work can help all men have a better understanding of the ways of the Lord in Heaven and His divine plan." ... " I hope that these notes don't get separated or there might be quite a bit of a silly misunderstanding, what with the monkeys and all."

    ::sits back and watches those without the time to actually read the post mod it Troll, Flamebait, and complain that there's no "-1 Religious"::

  • by Myriad ( 89793 ) <myriad AT thebsod DOT com> on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:27AM (#8294554) Homepage
    the original HMS Beagle, the ship Darwin travelled on during his famous voyage, may have been found. Marine archeologists believe they have found the ship, which has been resting at the bottom of some Essex marshes for the last century.

    Ok, so we have a ship that was designed to cross vast stretches sea that's been lost for centuries... so what do they do? Take a probe that is designed to cross vast streches of space and give it the same name!

    Good plan. How about naming the probe set to visit the asteroid belt "Titanic"! :)

    Blockwars [blockwars.com]: free, multiplayer gaming

  • by mr_resident ( 222932 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:31AM (#8294602) Homepage
    How long before it will be able to walk out of the swamp on it's own?

    *
  • by theMerovingian ( 722983 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @11:31AM (#8294605) Journal

    q: Why does the French Navy have glass-bottom boats?

    a: So they can see the old French Navy

  • ...but is there any news on the HMS Pinafore?
  • by PollGuy ( 707987 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @12:05PM (#8294956)
    This is great! Now all they have to do is wipe its flush memory, and it'll be in tip-top shape.

  • by Savatte ( 111615 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @12:08PM (#8294990) Homepage Journal
    it had evolved into a yacht
  • Darwinism (Score:3, Interesting)

    by the eric conspiracy ( 20178 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @12:46PM (#8295412)

    People in our time lose sight of how radical a change Darwinism brought to the philisophical outlook of man. It was one of the great sea changes in modern thought.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwinism

  • by ianscot ( 591483 ) on Monday February 16, 2004 @02:47PM (#8296828)

    The two superpowers had their various deep benthic submersibles that they've used for stuff like tapping each other's deep-sea cables and pulling up each other's dead subs and so on. (You might want to Read "Blind Man's Bluff" for an okay popular history of that stuff.) Now that the cold war's over, there are private markets for the technology, and the navy's happy to lend its stuff to Robert Ballard to poke around the Meditteranean, looking for history.

    Underwater archaeology's taking off as a result. We've had an amazing run of shipwreck-finding, haven't we? Heck, let alone shipe -- we get Black Sea villages that've been preserved in anaerobic environments since "THE flood." All sorts of sailing vessels. Nazi subs. It's a great time to be looking for ships down there. Go down off of the canaries, and you almost have too many ships to choose from.

    (William Broad's "The Universe Below" is a decent run through the military history of this stuff, and concentrates more on the shipwrecks side than, say, Richard Ellis's "Deep Atlantic." Broad also considers the legal and ethical problems -- who does a shipwreck from 1500 belong to? Ellis is more about the biology, which is cool too.)

    • I agree, and here's something related [alaska-freegold.com]: "Disasters from Kodiak's past could turn into blessings for its future, according to a maritime lawyer and shipwreck diving enthusiast. "You guys have a great resource in the maritime history of this island," Peter Hess told an audience at Kodiak College on Sunday.

      Audience members heard stories of silver, gold and jewels salvaged in recent years from wrecks dating to the days of the Spanish galleons. Hess recalled his excitement at seeing real treasure chests burstin

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