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MYSTERY DERELICT

STRUCK TWICE BY SHIPS SIGHTED FOUR TIMES Officers on inter-State snips trading between Melbourne, Adelaide and Fremantle are perturbed at the inactivity of the authorities in investigating a mysterious object that has been reported by ships tour times since 1925, and which had been struck twice. A fortnight ago the s.s. Australia struck a submerged object and severely damaged her propeller. The vessel is still undergoing repairs at Adelaide. There has been a slight variation in the reports of the position of the derelict, and experienced officers say that it is drifting in a small circle. Unless it is located and destroyed they fear a disaster. T&e four occasions on which the derelict has been sighted are: On March 31, 1925, the Katoomba sent a wireless message to the Navigation Department that she had sighted a derelict in Lat. 35.30 S., Long. 122-3* E. On January 29 last the Cymeric. in Lat. 35.5 S„ Long. 129.55 E., sightefl an object which she believed to be a small iceberg. In almost the same position on July 23 last the Dimbooia struck an unknown object. The overseas freighter Australia, on Novemne 19, struck a submerged object in La 35.22 S„ Long. 127.44 E. Search Hopeless The position of the object is Esperance, in the Australian Bign. and is right on the shipping r ? ut f: The Deputy-Director of NavigaU (Captain Davis), when asked about the matter, said there was no cau for alarm. . _ “For us to send out and search __ it would be hopeless,” be said, all probability the objects rel> °, r have just been some floating cargo, or trees, brought on the sn v ping route by the westward drift. “There are always some object floating about at sea, and all that be done is for ma iters to keep a , lookout. Even then they t seen. If a ship strikes a tree, it is going to stop to pick it up. ™ jects reported were certainly on steamer route, but they were LL taken there by the currents and soon drift away.” _

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/SUNAK19281227.2.142

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 547, 27 December 1928, Page 12

Word count
Tapeke kupu
343

MYSTERY DERELICT Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 547, 27 December 1928, Page 12

MYSTERY DERELICT Sun (Auckland), Volume II, Issue 547, 27 December 1928, Page 12

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