LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
If you knew about simple physics, you'd know that if a Viking longboat capsized, it would not sink but it would turn belly up. The biggest hazard was probably running into rocks, causing a breach in the hull, then you were done for. All the churches around the coastal towns have votive ships hanging from the ceiling, which probably to back to pagan times to invoke safety for those at sea.
This is a large one at Turku Cathedral.
"If you knew about simple physics"
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! *breathes* AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!
I can categorically assure you, Vixen, that I know enough about physics to know that if you put a large mass of water into an open-decked ship, that ship will sink in the same horizontal orientation as it would normally have been at the surface (unless the ship's balance and attitude had also been adversely affected, in which case it would capsize and sink).
The Mediterranean is littered with wrecks of Greek and Roman ships from antiquity. These ships were all open-decked as well. And in a great deal of the wrecks - probably the majority in fact - the surviving evidence shows clearly that the ship sank straight down in its keel-down horizontal attitude: the ship's cargo (usually tightly-packed amphorae) has retained the shape of the ship - something that would be impossible if the ship had capsized and spilled its cargo out at/near the surface. I've dived on two such wrecks myself.
Don't tell me I don't understand physics, when it's you yourself who does not. And don't tell me that open-decked ships can't (and don't) sink straight down (rather than your ludicrous and totally unscientific pet theory that they usually turn upside down and stay afloat for some time). I know better than you in both cases. M'kay?
