New Zealand Local Weather Forum
Weather Discussion => International => Topic started by: Mark on December 26, 2013, 01:04:46 PM
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December 26, 2013 - 9:57AM 441 reading now
Nicky Phillips, Colin Cosier
We woke on Christmas Day at Casey Station expecting to fly into Antarctica’s vast, white interior. Instead we found ourselves on the Aurora Australis icebreaker full steam ahead to rescue a distressed ship in Commonwealth Bay.
Early on Wednesday morning, MV Akademic Shokalskiy, a tourist ship recreating Sir Douglas Mawson’s 100-year-old Australasian Antarctic Expedition, signalled it was stuck in heavy pack ice.
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While ships often get surrounded by pack ice around Antarctica, the Russian Shokalskiy, a medium-sized vessel with about 74 crew and passengers, was in danger of being hit by a large iceberg.
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Just before 5am the Rescue Co-ordination Centre, part of the Australian Maritime Safety Authority in Canberra, ordered three ships, a Chinese and French vessel and the Aurora Australis, to lend assistance.
Since Sunday the Aurora Australis has been anchored near Casey Station where hundreds of thousands of tonnes of cargo and fuel were transported from the ship to the mainland for the coming year.
Science editor Nicky Phillips climbs aboard the Aurora Australia icebreaker after leaving Casey station. Christmas Day brought the unwanted gift of having to leave Antarctica early.
Fairfax Media's Nicky Phillips climbs aboard the Aurora Australis. Photo: Colin Cosier
The station was about halfway through its annual resupply when the ship was sent a rescue order.
It took less than five hours for the ship's crew and station staff to reload the ship, board new passengers, including ourselves, and recoil the fuel line – a mammoth task.
It will take about four days of sailing for the Aurora Australis to reach Commonwealth Bay, about 1100 nautical miles from Casey.
At any time the ship could be stood down from the emergency, but until that moment we sail ahead.
On board the Akademic Shokalskiy are scientists from the University of NSW, a journalist from the Guardian and dozens of tourists who have paid to be part of the recreation of Mawson’s expedition.
Those people who have ventured to the south continent talk of the “A-factor” – rarely does anything in Antarctica go as planned.
While we miss out on a trip to the Aurora Basin ice core drilling site, the dramatic halt to resupply may have a significant effect on those we left behind at Casey. Science projects may be postponed or delayed. And those wintering at the station may not see their belongings for some time.
Whether the Aurora Australis returns to station or heads home to Hobart after this mission will depend on many factors, said the ship’s captain, Murray Doyle, and the voyage leader, Leanne Millhouse.
And while Christmas Day was far from what we were expecting, we doubt those aboard the Academic Shokalskiy are having a jolly time either. They are expecting blizzards and 50-knot winds from Thursday.
http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/antarctic-tourist-ship-trapped-by-sea-ice-20131225-2zwjr.html
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...and they sent a chinese boat and its got stuck as well. Sounds like an ice skating tourney is going on down there...
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A rescue icebreaker is making steady progress zig-zagging through ice to rescue an ice-trapped ship in Antarctica with 74 people on board, including six New Zealanders.
But it could still be another 24 hours of waiting to be rescued for those marooned on board Russian explorer vessel MV Akademik Shokalskiy, which has been ice-bound 3000km southwest of Bluff since Christmas Day.
Chinese icebreaker Xue Long, or Snow Dragon, got within 6.1 nautical miles, close enough to be visible on the horizon from the stricken ship, but abandoned the rescue after striking heavy ice.
A second rescue vessel, the French-flagged icebreaker L'Astrolabe, was released from the rescue operation yesterday.
More:
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11179140 (http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=11179140)
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Previously, hopes had pinned on the Snow Dragon, a Chinese ice-breaker and one of the three vessels originally tasked to the search and rescue mission. The Snow Dragon was forced to abandon its efforts because the ice was too thick for it to handle.
http://worldnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/12/28/22083129-stranded-ship-awaits-australian-ice-breaker-in-antarctic?lite=