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怎么没人关心加拿大的重要事件?

2014-09-09 09:11:31
文章内容
www.cbc.ca/news/politi...-1.2760311
点击: 0 | 评论: 24 | 分类: 缺省 | 论坛: 温哥华不眠夜 | 论坛帖子
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seagirl
Re: 怎么没人关心加拿大的重要事件?
bcca _BBCODE_WROTE:
seagirl _BBCODE_WROTE:
1840年消失的船, 今天都能找到..

马航3月份消失的飞机,到现在还没消息...这世界奇了怪了


应该可以找到,只是时间问题。不想让人那么快找到,主要是怕一些人吃饱撑的没事干


你好聪明了.

偶觉得一定有人知道马航的飞机在哪里, 只是不公开罢了..

2014-09-09 09:40:13 | 引用
Untitled
说真的,从旅游的角度,加拿大西北航道,值得一去


2014-09-09 09:40:21 | 引用
bcca
bcca
Untitled

2014-09-09 09:41:42 | 引用
Untitled

2014-09-09 09:42:08 | 引用
bcca
bcca
Untitled

2014-09-09 09:42:47 | 引用
Untitled

2014-09-09 09:43:27 | 引用
bcca
seagirl
Re: 怎么没人关心加拿大的重要事件?
bcca _BBCODE_WROTE:
www.cbc.ca/news/politi...-1.2760311


看了这个link, 尤其是下面红色字这一段, 和国内的新闻报道如出一辙, 真的是万变不离其中啊! icon_mrgreen.gif

总觉得这边的新闻报道像八股文一样, 或者像国内人民日报的第一版政府重要头条一样, "当xxx做完政府工作报告的时候, 全场人民代表爆发出雷鸣般的掌声和喝彩声"

When Harper revealed the team's success at Parks Canada's laboratories in Ottawa Tuesday, the room burst into applause and hollering.

2014-09-09 09:51:51 | 引用
Re: 怎么没人关心加拿大的重要事件?
seagirl _BBCODE_WROTE:
bcca _BBCODE_WROTE:
seagirl _BBCODE_WROTE:
1840年消失的船, 今天都能找到..

马航3月份消失的飞机,到现在还没消息...这世界奇了怪了


应该可以找到,只是时间问题。不想让人那么快找到,主要是怕一些人吃饱撑的没事干


你好聪明了.

偶觉得一定有人知道马航的飞机在哪里, 只是不公开罢了..


说的极是。不过,本人觉得自己还不够聪明,要是真的很聪明的话,说不定先把那船找到,然后金币装到自己口袋不告诉别人,让那船继续成千古之谜,哈哈

2014-09-09 09:51:52 | 引用
bcca
bcca
Re: 怎么没人关心加拿大的重要事件?
seagirl _BBCODE_WROTE:
bcca _BBCODE_WROTE:
www.cbc.ca/news/politi...-1.2760311


看了这个link, 尤其是下面红色字这一段, 和国内的新闻报道如出一辙, 真的是万变不离其中啊! icon_mrgreen.gif

总觉得这边的新闻报道像八股文一样, 或者像国内人民日报的第一版政府重要头条一样, "当xxx做完政府工作报告的时候, 全场人民代表爆发出雷鸣般的掌声和喝彩声"

When Harper revealed the team's success at Parks Canada's laboratories in Ottawa Tuesday, the room burst into applause and hollering.

是的,不过这个对偶不是太重要,重要的是高呼哈伯万岁之后,那天船能不能找到,这是我一直以来关心的了,就算是高呼希特勒万岁,也一样开心,哈哈。

2014-09-09 09:55:58 | 引用
Untitled
Prime Minister Stephen Harper says one of Canada's greatest mysteries now has been solved, with the discovery of one of the lost ships from Sir John Franklin's doomed Arctic expedition.

"This is a great historic event," Harper said.

"For more than a century this has been a great Canadian story.… It's been the subject of scientists and historians and writers and singers. And so I think we have a really important day in mapping together the history of our country," the prime minister said.

The Franklin search: Peter Mansbridge on why we should care
Franklin ship discovery: Read Harper's full statement
CBC Special Report: Searching for Franklin
Interactive: Franklin searches through the years
At this point, the searchers aren't sure if they've found HMS Erebus or HMS Terror. But sonar images from the waters of Victoria Strait, just off King William Island, clearly show wreckage of a ship on the ocean floor.

Franklin discovery locator map
The wreckage was found on Sept. 7 using a remotely operated underwater vehicle recently acquired by Parks Canada. When Harper revealed the team's success at Parks Canada's laboratories in Ottawa Tuesday, the room burst into applause and hollering.

"This is a day of some very good news," Harper told the assembled group of researchers, some of whom had flown all night to be in Ottawa for the announcement.

"It appears to be perfectly preserved," Harper said of the ship, adding that it has "a little bit of damage."

Deck appears intact

Harper said the "latest, cutting-edge technology" Parks Canada used was integral to finding the ship under layers of growth on the ocean floor. "With older technology, you could have come very close to this and not seen it at all."

Franklin expedition ship
An iron fitting from a Royal Navy ship, identified as part of a boat-launching davit and bearing two broad arrows, was found on an island in the southern search area. (Douglas Stenton, Government of Nunavut)

Ryan Harris, an underwater archeologist who was Parks Canada's project lead for this year's search, said the wreck was "indisputably" one of Franklin's two ships.

"It's a very substantial wreck," Harris said, putting to rest earlier fears that Franklin's ships may not be found intact after so many years.

The sonar image shows some of the deck structures survived, Harris explained, pointing out the stubs of the masts which were apparently sheared away by the ice when it sank. Because the deck is relatively intact, the contents of the ship "should be very, very well-preserved."

The next step for the search team will be to take a look at what's inside.

Discovery 6 years in making

In a statement, the prime minister said Franklin's expedition laid the foundations of Canada’s Arctic sovereignty. He called the lost ships Canada's "only undiscovered national historical site."

Franklin artifacts found on island in Queen Maud Gulf
Stephen Harper and the obsession with Franklin
Franklin expedition: More doubts raised that lead poisoned the crew
The prime minister paid tribute to the search teams — a partnership between Parks Canada, the Royal Canadian Geographical Society, the Arctic Research Foundation, the Canadian Coast Guard, the Royal Canadian Navy and the government of Nunavut — whose work since 2008 has paid off.

Franklin expedition ships
A close-up reveals the Royal Navy broad arrows stamped at the base of the davit heel. The number 12 is also visible. (Douglas Stenton, Government of Nunavut)

“This discovery would not have been possible without their tireless efforts over the years, as well as their commitment, dedication and the perseverance of the many partners and explorers involved," Harper said.

Franklin's crew became locked in the ice during a doomed search for the Northwest Passage to the Pacific Ocean in 1845. All 128 crew members eventually died, though there's evidence to suggest some may have survived for several years.

Many searches throughout the 19th century attempted to find the lost ships, but the mystery of what happened to John Franklin and his men has never been solved.

Search parties later recorded Inuit testimony in the late 1840s that claimed one ship sank in deep water west of King William Island, and one ship went perhaps as far south as Queen Maud Gulf or into Wilmot and Crampton Bay. The location of this wreck backs up that testimony.

Artifacts found first

On Monday, the government of Nunavut announced that two artifacts from the Franklin expedition were found on an island in Nunavut.

A team of archeologists had found an iron fitting from a Royal Navy ship, "identified as part of a boat-launching davit, and bearing two broad arrows," on an island in the southern search area, the territory's government said.

A wooden object, "possibly a plug for a deck hawse, the iron pipe through which the ship’s chain cable would descend into the chain locker below," was also found.

"The iron fitting was lying on the shore, adjacent to a rock, a large rock, and the wooden artifact was a bit farther away, a bit farther from the shoreline," archeologist Doug Stenton told CBC News.

Stenton headed a three-member Nunavut team that found the objects on an island in the Queen Maud Gulf near Nunavut's King William Island on Sept. 1.

The searchers said these were the first artifacts found in modern times. Now they've pointed the way to the bigger find.

Inuit history accurate

"The beauty of where they found it is it's proof positive of Inuit oral history," CBC chief correspondent Peter Mansbridge, who has covered the Franklin search for many years, said Tuesday.

"The Inuit have said for generations that one of their hunters saw a ship in that part of the passage, abandoned and ended up wrecking…. It's exactly where this guy said it was."

The question now is whether these discoveries bring the project closer to finding more evidence of what happened to the Franklin expedition.

“Finding the first vessel will no doubt provide the momentum — or wind in our sails — necessary to locate its sister ship and find out even more about what happened to the Franklin expedition’s crew,” Harper said in his statement.

Prime Minister Stephen Harper stands with Ryan Harris, senior underwater archeologist for Parks Canada, after announcing one of the ships from Sir John Franklin's doomed 1845-46 expedition has been found.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper stands with Ryan Harris, senior underwater archeologist for Parks Canada, after announcing one of the ships from Sir John Franklin's doomed 1845-46 expedition has been found. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)
1 of 10
With files from The Canadian Press

2014-09-09 11:20:59 | 引用
whoareyou

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