OBVIOUSLY. I mean, 9/11 taught us all that concrete and steel cannot possibly fail from intense heat.
Some sorta inside job here I say.
OBVIOUSLY. I mean, 9/11 taught us all that concrete and steel cannot possibly fail from intense heat.
An overpass on Interstate 95 that collapsed in North Philadelphia on Sunday will take months to replace, officials said, snarling a bustling East Coast corridor during the summer travel season and severing a main commercial artery for the city.
Standing before the wreckage of what he called “remarkable devastation,” Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro (D) and other officials warned motorists to expect detours and embrace public transit for an unknown period as the highway is rebuilt.
A northbound slice of the road cratered and the southbound expanse is structurally unsound after a tanker carrying gasoline went up in flames under the overpass early Sunday morning, shooting out apocalyptic plumes of smoke and burning with such searing force that steel girders under the highway appear to have melted.
Hunter Valley bus crash: 10 killed after wedding party coach rolls, NSW premier confirms 21 in hospital – latest updatesTen people returning from a “fairytale” wedding in Australia’s Hunter Valley wine region in New South Wales have been killed in a devastating bus crash. More than 20 others have been taken to hospital with various injuries after the bus overturned late on Sunday night.
The 58-year-old driver has been arrested and charges are pending, while a crime scene has been declared at the site of the crash.
PHILADELPHIA (WPVI) -- Sources tell 6abc Action News that human remains have been found in the wreckage after a tanker truck fire led to the partial collapse of I-95 in Philadelphia over the weekend.
The driver's remains were removed from the cab of the tractor-trailer on Monday morning, sources said.
So far, the remains have not been identified.
The Action Cam was at the Pennsylvania Task Force One headquarters in the 6600 block of New State Road in the Tacony section of the city on Monday afternoon as the wreckage of the truck was hauled away.
Meanwhile, family members and separate sources confirm the name of the tanker truck driver as Nathaniel Moody.
At this time, authorities say Moody remains unaccounted for. Action News is told Moody worked for a trucking company from Pennsauken, New Jersey.
Sources say he has been doing the job for quite some time and was an experienced driver.
Yeah, if we have time, 101 is preferred where it exists in Ca.AndyinPA wrote: ↑Mon Jun 12, 2023 12:28 pm Yeah, I'm thinking more of LA, Sacramento, etc. I know it goes through farmland, etc., like the Willamette Valley. We've been on most of it more than a few times. He just never liked it.
Here, if we were heading south, we went straight down into West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, not hitting the coast until SC. I know it's a somewhat shorter trip, going down 95, but when we went to North or South Carolina, we always took the mountain route.
Greece shipwreck: up to 100 children were below deck, survivors say
Women also said to have been in the hold, amid fears 78 so far confirmed dead could rise into the hundreds
Helena Smith in Kalamata, and Jon Henley
Thu 15 Jun 2023 19.25 BST
Survivors from an overcrowded fishing boat that capsized and sank on Wednesday off the Greek coast in one of the worst disasters in the Mediterranean in recent years have told doctors and police that women and children were travelling in the hold of the vessel.
Seventy-eight people have been confirmed dead, but there are fears the number of victims could run into the hundreds.
“Right now everything is guesswork but we are working on the assumption that as many as 500 are missing,” said Nicolaos Spanoudakis, a police inspector. “Women and children, it seems, were in the hold.”
Doctors at Kalamata general hospital told Greek media and the BBC that survivors said as many 100 children had been in the bottom of the ship.
It has not been possible to verify the figure, though asked by a reporter from Greece’s ANT1 channel if there were 100 children onboard, one survivor replied: “Yes.”
On Thursday night it was announced that Greek authorities had arrested nine suspected people-smugglers believed to have piloted the vessel before it sank off the southern Peloponnese.
Skai TV reported that the nine – all men – were of Egyptian descent and were suspected of masterminding the illegal voyage of hundreds of people to Italy from Egypt, from where they had set out with the trawler.
“They are in custody and will appear before a local magistrate,” Nikos Alexiou, the Hellenic coastguard spokesperson, told the Guardian. “They are being held by the coastguard in Kalamata.”
A public prosecutor is likely to press several charges against the group including that of mass murder. Local media reports said the ship’s captain was not among them and had died when the vessel went down.
All 104 survivors were men aged between 16 and 40, authorities said. Most spent the night in a warehouse in the port. “They’re from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria and Egypt,” said Giorgos Farvas, Kalamata’s deputy mayor. “We’re talking about young men, mostly, who are in a state of huge psychological shock and exhaustion. Some fainted as they walked off the gangplanks from the vessels that brought them here.”
Reports suggested up to 750 people had packed on to the fishing boat that capsized and sank early on Wednesday about 50 miles (80km) from the southern coastal town of Pylos while it was being shadowed by the Greek coastguard.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/ ... -survivors
A submersible used to take people to view the wreck of the Titanic has gone missing in the Atlantic Ocean.
The Boston Coastguard told BBC News that a search and rescue operation was under way off the coast of Newfoundland.
It is unclear how many people were on board when it went missing.
Small submersibles occasionally take paying tourists and experts to view the wreck of the Titanic, some 3,800m (12,500ft) beneath the ocean surface.
OceanGate Expeditions, a private company that organises deep sea expeditions, confirmed in a statement that it owned the missing submersible and people were on board.
https://news.yahoo.com/maker-lost-titan ... 33646.htmlStonekettle
@Stonekettle
Regarding the missing sub:
Xbox controllers aren't the issue. Standard control device, extremely reliable, easily replaced.
The hatch isn't the issue. Unless they reach the surface, they couldn't open it underwater anyway.
The issue is a lack of emergency planning. 1/
The sea is unforgiving. It's dangerous out there, extremely so. You have to plan for everything to go wrong. You hope it doesn't, but you expect it will, and you prepare for it. If you don't, you'll die. 2/
And now, hundreds of people will have to risk THEIR lives on the water to search for this vessel and maybe attempt a rescue at depth. This is incredibly dangerous.
They should have at a minimum had an emergency beacon to at least minimize the search effort. 3/
This lack of planning and preparation might maximize profit, but it puts others at risk.
This same mindset writ large is the sort of thing that leads to disasters like the Deepwater Horizon. A lack of emergency preparation led to 11 dead and a massive environmental disaster. 4/
On the ocean, you have to expect everything will go bad all at once in the worst possible way, every time.
You expect it. You plan for it. You prepare for it. You train for it.
If it doesn't happen this time, it will sooner or later. Always. 5/5
The founder of the company behind the Titan submersible previously described his industry as "obscenely safe" and complained that passenger-vessel regulations held back innovation.
Stonekettle
@Stonekettle
So, a submarine full of rich people doesn't have any kind of automatic EPIRB transponder or underwater location sonar pinger? That seems like a serious oversight.
Unless your plan is to reduce the number of rich people in the world, I mean.
Note: Having been a Sailor most of my adult life, and having been involved in numerous rescue operations, I certainly hope they find and rescue these people.
The point of my comment is that the lack of an emergency transponder is gross negligence. Even for a private enterprise.
British billionaire in missing Titanic sub collaborated with Indian govt on project to bring on cheetahs from Namibia
Harding is known for his exploratory escapades across the globe.
By: PTI
London | Updated: June 20, 2023 22:09 IST
Hamish Harding has visited the South Pole multiple times, flown into space in 2022 onboard Blue Origin's fifth human-crewed flight, and set three world records.
Hamish Harding, a British businessman who collaborated with the Indian government to reintroduce eight wild cheetahs from Namibia to India, is among five people who went missing in the Atlantic Ocean aboard a tourist submersible on a mission to view the wreckage of the iconic ocean liner the Titanic.
British-Pakistani billionaire businessman Shahzada Dawood and his son Suleman were also on the sub, the BBC reported on Tuesday.
Governor Josh Shapiro @GovernorShapiro wrote: Based on the tremendous progress these crews made over the weekend, I can now say:
We will have I-95 back open this weekend.
We have worked around the clock to get this done, and we’ve completed each phase safely and ahead of schedule.
Our significant progress is all due to the incredible coordination with our local, state, and federal partners — and thanks to the hard-working men and women of the Philadelphia Building Trades who are making this happen.
Special hearing to examine decisions made after Ohio trail derailment
NTSB to hold rare field hearing in East Palestine, Ohio, and focus on crucial decision to release and burn toxic vinyl chloride
Associated Press
Some of the key decisions made in the aftermath of February’s fiery derailment of a Norfolk Southern train in eastern Ohio will be examined at a hearing on Thursday.
The National Transportation Safety Board is holding a rare field hearing in East Palestine, Ohio, over the next two days. Thursday’s hearing will focus on the emergency response to the derailment and the crucial decision officials made days later to release the toxic vinyl chloride in five tank cars and burn it to keep those cars from exploding.
That decision sent a towering plume of black smoke over the town near the Ohio-Pennsylvania border and prompted the evacuation of about half of East Palestine’s 5,000 residents. Officials have defended that decision as the best option when faced with the prospect of an explosion that would have sent shrapnel into the town.