cruises
Royal Navy finds sunken cruise vessel
Submitted by admin on Sat, 02/02/2008 - 11:14.he Royal Navy located the Canadian cruise vessel the MS Explorer this week in its icy resting place at the bottom of the ocean off Antarctica, where it has been for more than two months.
All 154 passengers and crew were safely removed from the vessel after it struck an iceberg Nov. 23 and sank.
The ice patrol ship HMS Endurance was doing a hydrographic survey and mapping work in the area when the British government requested the vessel search for the wreck of the Explorer.
Are polar cruises safe? Not all ships are equal
Submitted by admin on Sun, 12/02/2007 - 19:22.The recent sinking of the MS Explorer cruise ship in Antarctica has spotlighted the dangers of operating passenger vessels in remote polar areas.
The ice-reinforced Explorer was a veteran of the polar cruise-ship trade. It had made dozens of voyages to the Arctic and Antarctic since 1969, safely transporting thousands of tourists to see penguins and polar bears, glaciers and icebergs, though the ship was evacuated at least twice after Antarctic groundings. The Canadian-owned ship sank Nov. 23 after hitting submerged ice. Its 100 passengers and 54 crew were all rescued.
Oil spill threatens penguins
Submitted by admin on Sun, 12/02/2007 - 00:00.SANTIAGO, Chile -- About 2,500 penguins en route to their Antarctic mating grounds could be sickened by a diesel fuel spill from a Canadian cruise ship that struck an iceberg and sank last week.
A marine biologist says areas surrounding the almost two km-long spill site include breeding grounds for Antarctic and Adelia penguins, and the largest mating colony for Papua penguins.
Maria Jose Rosello, a Chilean marine biologist, says: "The danger is that this fuel spill will impede the journey that species like Papua penguins make at this time of year.


