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Taro Toporific wrote:Wanted for questioning:
[floatr][/floatr]
[SIZE="3"]Jet ferry apparently hits whale, some passengers injured [/SIZE]
Kyodo, March 05, 2006
NAGASAKI---A jet ferry collided with an object believed to have been a whale on Sunday off Tsushima, Nagasaki Prefecture, slightly injuring some passengers, Japan Coast Guard officials said.
A total of 90 passengers and seven crew members were on the 162-ton Beetle No. 3...more....
gboothe wrote:How do you spell submarine?
Taro Toporific wrote:UPDATE:
Taro Toporific wrote:One more time....
Taro Toporific wrote:[SIZE="5"]KAMIKAZE WHALES! [/SIZE]
Ferry again hits whale off Kyushu
Crisscross - News -Monday, March 20, 2006 at 06:58 EST
FUKUOKA ---It is the fourth incident this year of a collision between a ferry linking Hakata, Fukuoka Prefecture, and Busan, South Korea,
... Experts' opinions vary on the cause of the accidents.
Some say whales collide with ships when they rapidly surface from deep water, while others say female whales raising calves have trouble avoiding fast-moving ships.
Ship operators are trying hard to pinpoint the cause. Some experts say, however, accidents of this kind are unavoidable to some extent.
The service jointly run by Japan's Kyushu Railway Co and South Korea's Miraejet Co normally provides five round trips a day. Their "Jetfoil" passenger vessels are powered by hydrofoils in front and back that enable the ships to travel at more than 80 kilometers per hour while floating about 2 meters above the surface of the water.
According to JR Kyushu, the company's high-speed ships have had six collisions since December 2004, with four of them reported this year. Some passengers were injured, while three of its four hydrofoil ships suffered damage, including to their turbines.
Teruyoshi Onoda, a board director at JR Kyushu, said the accidents have not affected the number of passengers but have cost about 500 million yen in repairs.
In South Korea, a high-speed boat named "Kobee" was hit by a whale-related accident in which about 30 people were injured.
Tsutomu Tamura, who heads the Ecosystem Section at the Institute of Cetacean Research, said beaked whales, including Baird's beaked whales, feed deep in the sea and may have failed to go round the boats when they rapidly surfaced.
Akira Takemura, a professor at the Faculty of Fisheries, Nagasaki University, focuses on the fact that collisions have frequently occurred in the spring.
"Spring is the time when humpback whales that have raised their calves in waters near Okinawa and Taiwan travel north through Tsushima Strait," he said.
"It is possible that humpback whales traveling with calves, which move relatively slowly, may have collided with the boats," Takemura said.
JR Kyushu has so far invested 40 million yen to equip its fleet with a special device that emits acoustic waves disliked by whales. But Onoda expressed doubt about its effectiveness ... more
Taro Toporific wrote:
Of course, that "object" could be one these funky North Korean subs that are always breaking down.
Taro Toporific wrote:Nearly 100 injured in Japan ferry collision
channelnewsasia.com | 09 Mar 2019 08:47PM
TOKYO: At least 87 passengers in a high speed ferry were injured in an apparent collision with a marine animal in the sea of Japan on Saturday (Mar 9), coastguards and media said.
Five people were seriously injured in the accident, which occurred just before the hydrofoil was due to arrive on Sado island after a short trip from the mainland, the Japan Coast Guard said.
It is likely the ferry hit a whale, as both humpbacks and minkes are often found in the area...more...
Also:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-47509017
Russell wrote:Taro Toporific wrote:Nearly 100 injured in Japan ferry collision
channelnewsasia.com | 09 Mar 2019 08:47PM
TOKYO: At least 87 passengers in a high speed ferry were injured in an apparent collision with a marine animal in the sea of Japan on Saturday (Mar 9), coastguards and media said.
Five people were seriously injured in the accident, which occurred just before the hydrofoil was due to arrive on Sado island after a short trip from the mainland, the Japan Coast Guard said.
It is likely the ferry hit a whale, as both humpbacks and minkes are often found in the area...more...
Also:
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-47509017
No mention of the whale's injuries...
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