• Old Corolla shipwreck to go to Hatteras museum

    Updated: 2010-04-30 08:30:00
      By Jeff Hampton - The Virginian-Pilot Remains of a ship nearly 400 years old salvaged from the surf early this month will be moved from Corolla, N.C., to the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum in Hatteras. The wreck now sits exposed to the elements under an oak tree near the Currituck Beach Lighthouse. State and local officials agreed it would be better off out of the weather. Typically, sand and salt water protect old wrecks but once up on land and dried, they tend to deteriorate. Plans...

  • Scuba diving volunteers discover underwater archeology

    Updated: 2010-04-29 20:13:00
      By Alex Wilson - VCR Reporter Online A dedicated group of volunteer scuba divers employ their expertise surveying underwater archeology in the Channel Islands Marine Sanctuary.Coastal Maritime Archeology Resources members spend about a week living aboard research vessels twice a year, to measure and map shipwrecks, sunken airplanes and archeological sites scattered on the ocean floor.CMAR Director of Operations Patrick Smith says there’ nothing quite like seeing a shipwreck for...

  • Noah's Ark discovered. Again !

    Updated: 2010-04-29 09:40:32
      By Benjamin Radford - LiveScience's Bad Science A Chinese Christian filmmaker claims to have found the final resting place of Noah's Ark on Turkey's Mount Ararat.Yeung Wing-Cheung says he and a team from Noah's Ark Ministries found the remains of the Ark at an elevation of about 12,000 feet (3,658 meters). They filmed inside the structure and took wood samples that were later analyzed in Iran. He claims the wood was carbon-dated to around the reputed time of Noah's flood, which would...

  • Latest Noah's Ark 'just wood planted on Ararat'

    Updated: 2010-04-29 09:40:32
      By Joe Kovacs - WorldNetDaily Has the real Noah's Ark spoken of in the Bible truly been found ? t least two seasoned archaeologists who have made numerous expeditions to Mount Ararat in search of Noah's Ark are throwing cold water on this week's claim the Old Testament vessel has finally been discovered, saying it's a hoax involving wood hauled in from the Black Sea region."To make a long story short: this is all reported to be a fake," said Randall Price, director of Judaic Studies...

  • Campaign to save world's oldest clipper ship

    Updated: 2010-04-29 09:40:32
      From STV The passenger ship City of Adelaide, which travelled between Australia and Britain, is lying in Irvine.A firm has been appointed to review options for the future of the 145-year-old City of Adelaide, currently resting on a slipway in North Ayrshire. The Sunderland-built ship, which predates the Cutty Sark, took people and wool between Australia and Britain on 28 round trips.Later known as the Carrick, it has been left to the elements at Irvine and could still face deconstruction...

  • Government Investigating Foreign 'Treasure Hunter' After New Discovery

    Updated: 2010-04-28 21:20:40
      By Markus Junianto Sihaloho - Jakarta Post The government said on Wednesday that it had launched an investigation into the activities of alleged treasure hunter Michael Hatcher, who has a lengthy history with Indonesia and is believed to again be operating on a new discovery.Aji Sularso, an official with the National Committee for Salvage and Utilization of Valuable Objects from Sunken Ships (Pannas BMKT), said it had established a joint investigation team comprising related government...

  • Ghost ship may be older than originally thought

    Updated: 2010-04-28 21:20:40
      By Sandy Semans - Sentinel While State archaeologists try to determine the logistics needed to move the remains of a shipwreck from Corolla to the Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum in Hatteras, the identity of the colonial-period vessel seems more uncertain.Initially, it was thought that the pegged hull could be what is left of the HMS Swift, which went aground off of Virginia in 1698 and later ended up coming ashore in Currituck, where it was scavenged by locals. If that was found to...

  • Central School field trip-goers view shipwreck

    Updated: 2010-04-28 21:20:40
      From Wicked Local Cape Cod Back in 1746, the famous HMS Somerset was built in England to be a British Man of War ship. It wrecked off the cost of Truro Nov. 2, 1778. Back in 1775, ‘rsquo;hardly a man is now alive that still remembers’rsquo; the British warship floating off of the Charlestown shore. But on April 20, 2010, the Truro Central School 5th grade class went to Race Point Beach in Provincetown and hiked about two miles into Truro to see the remnants of the wreck...

  • Underwater safe protects £5m shipwreck treasures

    Updated: 2010-04-27 21:00:25
      From Telegraph.co.uk A shipwreck containing £5 million worth of ancient treasures is being protected by a cage, creating a giant underwater safe, in Croatia. The second century Greek trading vessel lies on the sea bed off the coast of Cavtat. Little remains of the wooden ship but its cargo of earthenware amphora - ceramic vases - still remain stacked row upon row.The vases, which originally contained olive oil and wine, are still tightly packed into the cargo hold as they were...

  • Search for lost Gallipoli relics

    Updated: 2010-04-27 08:50:22
      By Matt Deans - The Coffs Coast Advocate An expedition to uncover lost war relics beneath the waves at Gallipoli will set off for Turkey next month after being saved by a grant from the State Government.The archaeological survey, known as ‘’will map the forgotten underwater battlefields of Anzac Cove, North Beach and Suvla Bay.Coffs Harbour diver and photographer Mark Spencer is set to rejoin the team that in 1998 surveyed the famous World War I wreck of the Australian submarine...

  • New Anzac memories for HMS Centaur

    Updated: 2010-04-23 19:46:00
    By Robert Blackmore - ABC Sunshine Coast Now that the location of the sunken hospital ship the Centaur is known, this Anzac Day will hold a special significance for the relatives of those who lost their lives in 1943.Now that the location of the sunken hospital ship the Centaur is known, this Anzac Day will hold a special significance for the relatives of those who lost their lives in 1943.As Australians all over the world prepare to remember our lost diggers during Anzac Day memorials and dawn...

  • Korea to Develop Mobile Underwater Robots

    Updated: 2010-04-23 07:34:00
      By Kim Tae-gyu - Korea Times Korea is striving to develop versatile aquatic robots, which can swim as well as crawl on the seabed at a depth of 6 kilometers by 2016. The Ministry of Land, Transport and Maritime Affairs said Monday that the Seoul administration will channel 20 billion won over the next five years to create the underwater vehicles. It must be able to swim at a speed of 18 meters per minute and walk 30 meters per minute to explore the seabed to search for organisms...

  • Sedwick Treasure Auction #7 Brings In $1.37 Million

    Updated: 2010-04-20 19:29:00
      By Daniel Frank Sedwick - Coin Link “Our latest auction proves that world coins and treasure items are still strong,” said Daniel Sedwick, company principal and founder, “and that we achieve consistent results. This is our second auction in a row that reached over $1 million with a 94% sell-through rate, which is remarkable and a testament to the hard work we put in, both to get great consignments and to do what it takes to sell them all.”Sedwick also pointed out...

  • Ecodivers scour Elizabeth River bottom for trash

    Updated: 2010-04-18 04:57:48
      By Scott Harper - The Virginian-Pilot They found a wheelchair, three bikes, a baby stroller, a bag of laundry, a mop, tires, a garden cart, a sledge hammer, city of Norfolk banners, chairs, tables, a Ford hubcap, a ladder covered with oysters, hoses, cables, chains and a traffic cone – all covered with black mud and years of foul rot.Commercial divers hauled up all this junk Saturday and loads more from the bottom of the Elizabeth River, in a small cove near Town Point Park and...

  • Roman ingots to shield particle detector

    Updated: 2010-04-16 04:24:00
      By Nicola Nosengo - Nature News Around four tonnes of ancient Roman lead was yesterday transferred from a museum on the Italian island of Sardinia to the country's national particle physics laboratory at Gran Sasso on the mainland. Once destined to become water pipes, coins or ammunition for Roman soldiers' slingshots, the metal will instead form part of a cutting-edge experiment to nail down the mass of neutrinos.The 120 lead ingots, each weighing about 33 kilograms, come from a larger...

  • The search for a shipwreck near Four Mile Point

    Updated: 2010-04-15 08:07:12
    By Chick Huettel - The DestinLog.com Many, many years ago while looking over a nautical chart of the Choctawhatchee Bay, I noted that the map revealed the identifying mark of hull bones just off Four Mile Point, which is located north of the Sandestin Resort area. I think the map was dated in the area of 1950. I had owned a small lot on the point and was fascinated. It lay almost due west of the property. Loving archeology, I was determined to find the wreck. The U.S. Coast Guard...

  • Twitter TreasureHunting Happy Friday treasure hunt

    Updated: 2010-04-08 10:01:17
    : Skip past navigation On a mobile phone Check out m.twitter.com Skip to navigation Skip to sign in form Login Join Twitter Happy Friday treasure hunters ff iDetectorist kellycodetector 8:25 AM Sep 25th , 2009 via web TreasureHunting Footer 2010 Twitter About Us Contact Blog Status Goodies API Business Help Jobs Terms Privacy

  • Twitter TreasureHunting Happy Friday treasure hunt

    Updated: 2010-04-08 10:01:17
    : Skip past navigation On a mobile phone Check out m.twitter.com Skip to navigation Skip to sign in form Login Join Twitter Happy Friday treasure hunters follow friday iDetectorist kellycodetector 7:51 AM Sep 11th , 2009 via web TreasureHunting Footer 2010 Twitter About Us Contact Blog Status Goodies API Business Help Jobs Terms Privacy

  • Analysis: Markov clustering and the case of the unsupported protein complexes

    Updated: 2010-04-08 10:01:17
    In 2006, Krogan and coworkers published a paper in Nature describing a global analysis of protein complexes in budding yeast. This resulted in a network of 7,123 protein-protein interactions involving 2,708 proteins, which was organized into 547 protein complexes using the Markov clustering algorithm. Considering my previous two posts, it probably comes as a surprise [...]

  • Analysis: Markov clustering and the case of the nonhomologous orthologs

    Updated: 2010-04-08 10:01:16
    In the previous blog post I described how the MCL algorithm can sometimes produce unnatural clusters with disconnected parts. The C implementation of MCL has an option to suppress this behavior (--force-connected=y), but I suspect that it is rarely used. I have thus taken a closer look at some notable applications of MCL in bioinformatics [...]

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