Torpedo tanks:An explosion at
Parrot’s Landing in Grand Cayman
resulted in criminal negligence
charges against the proprietor.
Evidently, the shop was storing compressed
air in a WWII-vintage torpedo
housing not designed for that
purpose. An employee was filling
tanks when the housing exploded,
decapitating him and injuring
other bystanders. Scuttlebutt has it
that when the business had
changed hands, the prior owner
had suggested that the storage
arrangement was unsafe, but they
changed nothing. The new Parrot’s
Landing management was charged
with criminal negligence, but
acquitted in December after a 6-
week trial. The Cayman Islands
Watersports Operators Association
reports that many of these storage
torpedoes,’ were apparently distributed
throughout the Caribbean
and around the world in the 70s
and 80s.
Well, they are torpedoes: In
Osaka, Japan on February 9, what
seemed to some like a terrorist attack,
was actually a dive tank smashing
through the window of an auto showroom
and damaging five new luxury
cars. Believing there was only a little
air left, the owner of the tank, who
was on the street, quickly opened the
valve, but the jet of compressed air
packed enough wallop to send his
tank “high up into the sky as if it were
a loose jet engine,” police said.
Seconds later, the cylinder crashed
through the show room window,
crushed a metal table, and damaged
cars with glass and metal shrapnel. People in the showroom were showered
with shattered glass, but escaped uninjured.
Thirty days of fame: The Coral Reef
Alliance ( CORAL) is once again soliciting
photos from amateur photographers
for their 2002 calendar. You need
to get your shot from marine parks and
other protected coral reefs where people
are taking action to protect reefs. If
your photo is selected to represent a
month, you’ll get 25 copies of the calendar
and your photo may become part of
the United Nations Coral Reef Image
Bank. CORAL’s calendar is surely the
most widely circulated underwater calendar
anywhere, so take a shot at getting
your 30 days of fame. For more information
visit www.coral.org or write:
CORAL, 2014 Shattuck Ave., Berkeley,
CA 94704-1117, 510- 848-0110 or 888-
CORAL-REEF; fax 510-848-3720.
Chapbook corrections :We heard
from Julie Trussell at Crystal Divers in
Fiji, who disputed an item in the
Chapbook, saying that travelers “don’t
receive a 20% discount if they book
direct with us. Our rates are the same on
the web page as they are to travel agents
and wholesalers. The last thing we wish
to do is undercut the travel professionals
we work with.” On behalf of traveling
divers, I probably should have edited
out the comment. While I don’t know
about Crystal Divers, there are dive
operations and resorts — and certainly
business hotels — that will give you a
break if you book directly. Travel agents
don’t like it and will use it as an excuse
not to work with certain places. So,
while you might not be able to cut a
deal with Crystal Divers, there’s no
harm in asking others.
Boiled Shrimp: Snapping shrimp
(Alpheus hetero chaelis) found on
tropical coral reefs create balls of plasma
almost as hot as the surface of the
Sun, a Dutch researcher has found.
They have an outsized claw that fires
jets of water at their prey. The noise
they make pervades the ocean, and is
generated not by the clicking claws, but
by tiny bubbles in the water jet that
expand and then collapse violently.
When the bubbles collapse, any gas or
water vapor inside them is compressed,
which can raise its temperature to startling
levels — around 5000o C. These
extreme conditions only last for around
200 picoseconds, however, and are
most common three millimeters from
the tip of the shrimp’s claw (New
Scientist, 14 October, 2000).