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Sunk 1915 Antarctica
 
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Image Title:  Sunk 1915 Antarctica
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 By: Tim  Schumm  
  Copyright ©2007

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Photographer Tim  Schumm  Tim  Schumm {Karma:29196}
Project #21 Alone Camera Model Nikon D80
Categories Landscape
Historical
Travel
Film Format digital
Portfolio Antarctica
Sea adventures
Ocean images
Lens Nikon  12-24mm f/4G ED-IF AF-S DX
Uploaded 12/29/2007 Film / Memory Type Digital
    ISO / Film Speed 160
Views 699 Shutter
Favorites Aperture f/
Critiques 22 Rating Critique Only Image
Location City - 
State -  BOTTOM OF THE WORLD
Country - Antarctica   Antarctica
About This is the Wreck Guvernoren, a 3400 ton Norwegian Whaling factory ship that was built in 1891 as a cargo ship and converted for the use as a factory ship in 1914. The ship caught fire and was beached in 1915 right here where we found her, half submerged but amazingly intact for the length of time at this location. Upon looking within the rusting hull you could discern the stern planks far below the surface of the water. The clarity of the sea here was amazing where seemingly there is no limit to the depths unveiled.

I am also writing a blog on the trip for www.acdsee.com the photo software company if you are interested in checking it out. It is still in process I am adding more everyday.
Here is the link:

http://blog.acdsee.com

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Tim
Schumm


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There are 22 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Omar Amroussy Omar Amroussy   {K:4502} 12/28/2008
amazing colors and compositions

  0


Sharrie Shaw   {K:944} 1/21/2008
Somewhere in time....... captured on film!

  0


Roger Skinner Roger Skinner   {K:81846} 12/31/2007
LMAO James!!

  0


Roger Skinner Roger Skinner   {K:81846} 12/31/2007
yeah but the 'blads had that silly glass frame in 'em n mine doesnt so I guess I dont care I mean once ya got one what do you want with another.. nevertheless John you are right and it sticks in my throat a little.. now.. whats your position on Mawson's Hut kekeke

  0


John Bohner   {K:8368} 12/31/2007
I would remind both you and Tim the among the 'junk' left on the moon are a number of Hasselblads and Nikons. No doubt a collector would pay a pretty penny to own one of those! Only the film came back, the rest was too heavy and on no use!
JB

  0


* James * * James *   {K:20200} 12/30/2007
Tim, i was thinking of the X-Files episode "Dod Kalm" when I saw this photo. Not sure if you have ever seen it but this image invokes the same kind of mystery in my mind.

More closely to what you've written, I can forgive people 50-100 years ago for their actions. No-one could really foresee the state of the planet today. Now we all need to do something to improve conditions, but as long as some people think others arent doing anything, then i understand why nothing seems to be happening in protecting the planet.

one thing we ought not to do is invade antartica (and the far north) and start plundering whatever might be there.

  0


Eb Mueller Eb Mueller   {K:24960} 12/30/2007
Beautiful rich tonality and dramatic forms, Tim! Excellent!
Eb

  0


Tim  Schumm Tim  Schumm   {K:29196} 12/30/2007
Hi James,

Knee how ma,

Good to hear from you. What you say is true. I think though for me in this context, where the land is so untouched for the most part that it is a bit shocking to see this ship lodged there. It was a Whaling factory ship having worked in this harbour for only a year before burning. Having processed over 550 whales during that time. All the crew was saved I believe because for the most part it was in the harbour here when it happened and there were many other ships around. The hull was still a half inch thick so i imagine it will be there for a while yet. For being there close to 90 years, there was still paint on the hull and it looked like the surface rust was not the problem for it. This may have been due to type of steel. In fact it may have been iron and not steel at all.
The Whaling thing is a tough one for me, as it is not really needed these days and yet we seem to be interested in hunting to the very point of extinction. The one way I attempt to look and except this ignorance is that we are here on this planet as a result of a certain lacking in wisdom and that maybe this world is a training ground for that in which we are lacking. I suppose that really, not so long ago, it was a molten ball of lava and that really we can't destroy the creativity of Earth, it just keeps changing. So we have the fortune to see it in all it's manifestations.....humans included.
Now China is a different story, the history there is so deep it is hard to fathom and the relics left behind are fascinating beyond comprehension. The difference here is that it has been occupied for so long with a ever changing style of civilization that this in itself becomes the focus of all that you see there.

  0


* James * * James *   {K:20200} 12/30/2007
this is the kind of junk i dont mind seeing left around. its a wreck, and you can find them all over the world, and people pay to see them, in particular divers. this one would be very interesting to have a look at, and i'm curious what happened to the crew of the ship after it was beached. this photo is intriguing for that fact alone.

james

  0


txules                                . txules  .   {K:62768} 12/30/2007
fabulous...txules

  0


Roger Skinner Roger Skinner   {K:81846} 12/30/2007
woops picked the wrong bloke for a rant !! kekeke

  0


Tim  Schumm Tim  Schumm   {K:29196} 12/30/2007
I have to say I was not very interested in the ship really so I thought I would try to see it as a Art subject and ignore the fact that it is just old junk. We visited another area ( Ex Whaling Station) with lots more junk lying around a week later and i found it very depressing so I shot all the compositions in cool blues or B/W to express my dismay. Couldn't get out of there fast enough.

  0


Tim  Schumm Tim  Schumm   {K:29196} 12/30/2007
I am donating massive funds to the cause as we speak...may it live on forever....Hail the Hut!

  0


Roger Skinner Roger Skinner   {K:81846} 12/30/2007
yeah you are right.. the big difference is that the bone was biodegradable whereas some of the stuff we now leave behind isnt without even thinking about spent nuclear fuel rods OMG and whats weirder is that Mawson's Hut is now subject to a Heritage Listing what a joke much as it is a fascinating place.. it is a joke.. it should be pulled down.. If people want to see what it looked like they can look at Eliot Porter's photographs

  0


Tim  Schumm Tim  Schumm   {K:29196} 12/30/2007
Hi Roger,

Isn't there junk already on both Mars and the moon?...lol....we are just the same as caveman throwing the bone out of the cave. Not much has changed with all that tech knowledge. We have gained little wisdom to balance the intellectual knowledge, so the destruction continues.

  0


Dave Stacey Dave Stacey   {K:150877} 12/30/2007
Good capture of the wreck and an interesting description, Tim!
Dave.

  0


Debarshi Duttagupta Debarshi Duttagupta   {K:26815} 12/30/2007
Tim it sure is surprising to see how intact the Ships hull is.

  0


Roger Skinner Roger Skinner   {K:81846} 12/30/2007
amzing how we just leave junk all over the planet eh.. next thing you know we'll be leaving it on the moon or mars or ...

  0


Gustavo Scheverin Gustavo Scheverin   {K:164501} 12/30/2007
Una gran foto, gran hallazgo!
Felicitaciones!

  0


Tim  Schumm Tim  Schumm   {K:29196} 12/30/2007
hi Paul,
Yes i made a pact with myself to get out there and see things cause life is short and things are changing fast....so I am working little and traveling lots.

  0


Paul Stockley Paul Stockley   {K:1067} 12/29/2007
Great photo and a very well detailed story behind it. It must be fantastic to get the chance to see these places.
Regards,
Paul.

  0


Neil A   {K:297} 12/29/2007
Great photograph. The many colors of rust are amazing.

  0


  1

 

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