CrasVox t1_j9a6rqi wrote
Reply to comment by amehatrekkie in Previously unreleased footage from first submersible dives in July 1986 to the RMS Titanic shipwreck — British passenger liner that sank 14-15 April 1912 remains about 4,000 metres undersea in the Atlantic Ocean by marketrent
I think it was more of a cover story.
eljefino t1_j9b3e9d wrote
We know the Thresher and Scorpion are gone. It would be nice to occasionally monitor their resting sites, making sure the reactors are intact, etc.
Accujack t1_j9bpz6t wrote
They've been monitored continuously since they sank by the US Navy.
reformed_colonial t1_j9cs3nm wrote
They are checked periodically for radiation leaks, and to be sure other countries aren't sniffing around. These days, the threat of someone making off with a rusty old Mk 45 nuclear torpedo aren't really a concern, but back during the Cold War it was.
I would imagine that Scorpion/Thresher survey visits are good training for current generation crews on Seawolf-class et al. to brush up their skills.
nondescriptzombie t1_j9afq5w wrote
Like Hughes "oil exploration" trip where they tried to raise the K-129?
Was so depressing when the Glomar Explorer was scrapped.
eljefino t1_j9b39ak wrote
Glomar was supposedly "mining manganese nodules."
[deleted] t1_j9ah6q0 wrote
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