I find it hard to believe the mother ship didn't have any kind to ability to hear such an implosion that close to its hull. It had to be a significant "POP"
They knew it had imploded before they ever let out a call for help.
Oceangate announced yesterday that the crew on the support vessel had heard a loud “bang” on their hydrophone.
As far as help goes. My opinion isn't all based on wealth. But, if you look at the world from a triage point of view, it was far from using resources to their best advantage. A fire fighter does not go after the people on the 30th floor before getting the people on the ground floor out. With the money that was blown on this a lot of other lives could have actually been saved. Lot of life saving medical procedures do not get preformed around the world for lack of money and other resources.
We know that every year climbers on Everest are going to get in serious trouble. Why don't we make "heroic efforts" to save them from their own near impossible situations?? A very few do get saved when others stumble across them, but not from actual rescue missions. More than one climber in distress has simply been abandon. Why is no big and expensive effort made even though the summit of Everest is easier to get to than the Titanic??
Because everyone knows it is a waste of time, effort and hazardous.
I don’t buy the argument that lots of lives could have saved with the money spent here. That’s not how budgets work and the USN and USCG are not leaving people to die due to budget shortfalls.
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There have been helicopter rescues, and the highest has been from 23,000 ft in Nepal. That’s insanely high by helicopter landing standards.
As for rescuing other climbers, it’s often a mater of avoiding other fatalities.
My wife and I cave dive and we do some pretty advanced stuff involving closed circuit side mount rebreathers, mixed gasses, dive propulsion vehicles, complex navigation, small passages, zero visibility, deep depths and long penetration distances, and a time or two going to places where more people have gone to the moon.
If we dive with other people on the team we scale the difficulty of the dive way back as we simply do not trust them.
We put a great deal of time, money and effort into training, equipment, redundancy, planning, work up dives, and then stick to the plan because we know that the only resources we will have to solve a problem as the resources we brought with us. We also know that small mistakes can kill.
We also came to an agreement a long time ago that if we screwed up and we got in a situation where we only had the resources to get one of us out, one of us was going to get out. All other things being equal, she will be the one getting out.
I don’t imagine mountain climbing at those altitudes is any different. All those inspirational rescue stories aside, they are the exception. In any extreme environment if you want to prevent a single fatality event from becoming a multiple fatality event, you have to be willing to cut your losses.