There is a
lot of comment and discussion about the sinking of the “Titanic” in 1912. Along with this is occasional reference to
her sister ship the “Olympic”.
For those
of us with a taste for “omens” that we should be marking the “Titanic” anniversary
with an Olympic Games being held in London
could be thumbing our noses at the ancient gods.
But if the
pessimists of the blogosphere are to be believed there are more than enough
disasters impending not to need any omens.
Humanity is all too capable of visiting disasters on itself without
divine help.
This
article appeared in Science Daily, link below, the web summary science site
from which many of our MSM science stories seem to be drawn.
Unluckily,
the interns, temporaries and work experience people who do the devilling often
do not quite understand what the scientists are saying.
Basically, the
article linked below suggests that one key problem is good old British
workmanship allied with management cost cutting leading to severe stress on
impact in parts of the ship’s hull.
Physics did the rest.
The article
concludes:
"No
one thing sent the Titanic to the bottom of the North
Atlantic . Rather, the ship was ensnared by a perfect storm of
circumstances that conspired her to doom," writes Corfield.
Grandad, a
decorator, who did some work on the “Olympic”, claimed that the “Titanic” was
commanded by incompetent officers. At
least that’s what his father in law, an engine room man, told him.
But neither
of them was taught any Science at school.
"a perfect storm of circumstances"
ReplyDeleteI wonder if David Cameron has heard that phrase? It sticks uncomfortably in the memory.