Ten years and more than $4 million later, the dream of preserving the USTS Texas Clipper (ex-SS Excambion, ex-USS Queens) as an artificial reef off the Texas coast is now a reality.
After several weather delays this week, the ship was successfully sunk on the reefing site at 12:35 p.m. Saturday. What hasn't been reported -- or not enough anyhow, is just how much everyone involved in this project cared about this ship.
People actually get teary-eyed talking about it. Those people include me. No kidding.
Something else that I'm sure we'll be talking about more in the future is the science that will be conducted at the reefing site -- everything from monitoring biological communities to studying the pace of corrosion.
Here's the video of the sinking, courtesy of the Associated Press (courtesy of my colleagues at TPWD, actually).
1 comment:
What an awesome and sobering sight! It gives one pause to think. But . . . How is it that it was so expensive to sink a ship? I'm not versed on these procedures, but it seems like a lot.
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