The Navy has some extremely sensitive microphones and, believe it or not, it can monitor pretty much the entire Atlantic Ocean. They have used it to locate a downed submarine several times. The search for the Argentine submarine ARA San Juan is one such example.
The sinking of the USS Scorpion in 1968 is a prominent example of using sound triangulation to locate a downed submarine. The Scorpion, a nuclear submarine of the United States Navy, was returning from a mission in the Atlantic Ocean when it suddenly disappeared. There was no distress call and all 99 crew members were lost.
The U.S. Navy used a system called Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS), which was an underwater sound network designed to detect Soviet submarines during the Cold War. The system picked up a loud, underwater sound on the day the Scorpion was lost.
The Navy used the SOSUS data to triangulate the position of the sound, which was believed to be the Scorpion's hull imploding under pressure as it sank. After an extensive search, the wreckage was eventually found in the Atlantic Ocean, about 740 km southwest of the Azores.
This event showed how passive acoustic monitoring, like that used by SOSUS, can be an effective way to detect and locate underwater events such as the sudden explosive implosion of a submarine hull.
The U.S. Navy used a system called Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS), which was an underwater sound network designed to detect Soviet submarines during the Cold War. The system picked up a loud, underwater sound on the day the Scorpion was lost.
Does this mean the Navy knows about submarines connected to Epstein's island or Terramar? Perhaps they are too small to be detected.
Good post. I love submarine stuff.
The Navy has some extremely sensitive microphones and, believe it or not, it can monitor pretty much the entire Atlantic Ocean. They have used it to locate a downed submarine several times. The search for the Argentine submarine ARA San Juan is one such example.
The sinking of the USS Scorpion in 1968 is a prominent example of using sound triangulation to locate a downed submarine. The Scorpion, a nuclear submarine of the United States Navy, was returning from a mission in the Atlantic Ocean when it suddenly disappeared. There was no distress call and all 99 crew members were lost.
The U.S. Navy used a system called Sound Surveillance System (SOSUS), which was an underwater sound network designed to detect Soviet submarines during the Cold War. The system picked up a loud, underwater sound on the day the Scorpion was lost.
The Navy used the SOSUS data to triangulate the position of the sound, which was believed to be the Scorpion's hull imploding under pressure as it sank. After an extensive search, the wreckage was eventually found in the Atlantic Ocean, about 740 km southwest of the Azores.
This event showed how passive acoustic monitoring, like that used by SOSUS, can be an effective way to detect and locate underwater events such as the sudden explosive implosion of a submarine hull.
Does this mean the Navy knows about submarines connected to Epstein's island or Terramar? Perhaps they are too small to be detected.
If not - there will be records
Not really. Knowing the time of an event and being able to triangulate the position of an event are two different things.
The USS Scorpion ended it all because it hated its name kek. Nautical vessels should have nautical themed names.