Showing posts with label lake huron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lake huron. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Explore a historical #LakeHuron #shipwreck in #3D thanks to new imaging technology. - http://clapway.com/2015/09/08/marine-archaeologists-3d-models-of-shipwrecks123/

A team of marine archaeologists in Michigan is using a new imaging technology to create 3-D models of historical shipwrecks at the bottom of Lake Huron.


The technique, called “photogrammetry,” works by feeding series of two dimensional photos into a software program that translates them into three dimensional models that are perfectly to scale. The team in Michigan, led by diver Joe Hoyt, has been collecting photos of the Huron wrecks for several years now. But this is the first time they have had the technology to monitor the environment with the kind of depth and precision that the 3-D models allow.


The new technique offers more realistic representations of the wrecks and a greater degree of accuracy in measurements, enabling the researchers to assess even minute changes in the ships over time. The 3-D modeling technology is also a huge plus for marine archaeologists considering how time-consuming and expensive the dives can be at deepwater sites like these. Photogrammetry models are quick, easy, and cheap to produce compared to the 2-D photo series, in addition to the enhanced detail they provide.


Exploring Storybook Shipwrecks


Hoyt and the rest of the team recently visited eight deep dive sites in the Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary in Lake Huron. The sanctuary measures 4,300 square miles and is managed by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the state of Michigan. The team spent several days on the excursion aboard a Great Lakes-based environmental research vessel known as the Storm.


One of the wrecks being studied was the Defiance, a “110-foot schooner that sunk in 1854 after colliding with the John J. Audubon.” The Defiance is one of Lake Huron’s earliest wrecks and sits nearly 200 feet below the surface of the water. Hoyt says the Defiance was marvelously well-preserved, one of several “storybook” shipwrecks that the 3-D models could also make accessible to non-divers.


The team is already envisioning interactive touch-screen exhibits and 3-D printers that spit out the shipwreck of your choosing, complete with historical annotations and commentary. Soon, Americans could be exploring the deepest depths of their maritime heritage without ever donning a wetsuit.



Shipwrecks are scary. Musio is cute:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MTuL0nLmBw8



Archaeologists Create 3D Models of Shipwrecks

Sunday, July 19, 2015

The #nuclearwaste #removal plan for Ontario"s #LakeHuron - http://clapway.com/2015/07/19/us-keeping-nuclear-waste-out-of-the-great-lakes-234/

The City of Marysville, NY recently rejected a proposal from the Ontario Power Generation (OPG) to dump nuclear waste off the shores of Lake Huron, in the town of Kincardine, Ontario. A resolution was unanimously decided upon by the Marysville City Council, for a number of potential health and environmental-related issues.


THE ORIGINAL NUCLEAR WASTE REMOVAL PLAN


The Ontario Power Generation proposed their idea to dump radioactive material into what they are calling a “deep geological repository.” In other words, the OPG planned to drill a roughly 2500-foot hole into the bed of limestone just off the shore of Lake Huron, as a means to hold nuclear waste for about thirty-or-so years, before being sealed away completely. This waste would have the potential to be dangerous for over 100,000 years, kept safe by eight nearby nuclear reactors, as well as an additional twelve just east of Toronto.


WHAT?


If you’re scratching your head as to why such a plan would ever be put into action, you’re not alone. On July 13th, the Marysville City Council decided unanimously that any potential economic benefit would be largely overshadowed by the enormous health and environmental risk that inevitably comes with dumping nuclear waste so close to people, and the national landmarks they live near.


US: Keeping Nuclear Waste Out of the Great Lakes - Clapway


Drawing from the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement of 2012, the resolution stressed the importance of keeping to the agreement made between Canada and the US, which stated that both governments have an obligation to protecting the Great Lakes from pollution and industrial practices.


SO… THERE’S A HAPPY ENDING?


Well, sort of. The proposal is still technically on the table, as there seems to be no clear or specific proof as to how exactly the dumping of radioactive waste would affect the environment, or the health of nearby people. While the proposal is still technically alive, the City of Marysville hopes that strength in numbers will eventually give them the edge they need to pass effective legislation that would put an end to the proposal once and for all.



 


Protect your environment. Atmoph celebrates nature in your home:




US: Keeping Nuclear Waste Out of the Great Lakes