254 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
254 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 4447
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Title: HPR4447: Interview with Margreet Pakkert at the Flevoland 2025 Field Work Archaeology Open Day.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4447/hpr4447.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-26 00:47:08
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4447 for Tuesday the 19th of August 2025.
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Today's show is entitled, Interview with Margaret Packert at the Flevel in 2025
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Field Work Archaeology Open Day.
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It is hosted by Ken Fallon and is about 13 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, the shipwreck is a Dutch water skip with two chamber
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to keep fish alive until reaching port.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I am here talking to...
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...Raflet Packerts.
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I'm a great.
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You're standing in a portic cabin in the middle of a field, literally on the water.
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Where are we and why are we here?
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We are in Flevelands.
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We are at an archeological excavation and we are excavating a shipwreck.
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So, Fleveland, for people who don't know, is in Holland, better known as Nederland,
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better known as the Lowlands.
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And as my geography teacher used to tell me, God may have met the world, but the Dutch met Holland.
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So, this was where we're standing now, literally, was the Zouder-Zay.
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The Zouder-Zay was a Zay right in the middle of the Netherlands.
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It was Brackish, which means part sweet, part salt, somewhere in the middle.
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And mostly, there were fishing vessels.
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There was also trade and the VOC worked there.
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It's just a lot of shipping traffic.
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And the VOC is the Dutch East India company.
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So, you had this ships come from around the Amsterdam area.
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Harder bike went out via the Zouder-Zay, up the north of Holland and out.
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But you're still in the port of heaven on the water.
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What happened?
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Why are we dry here?
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Well, at some point, during the 20th century, the Netherlands decided they needed more land.
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So, they took part of the Zouder-Zay and they made it dry.
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They made Flevelands, which is a new province.
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It's about, I think, 60, 70, 80 years old now.
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It depends on which part of the province you're standing in.
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And it was basically made as an extension of Amsterdam and to make more farmland.
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But that means that all the shipwrecks that were once at the Zouder-Zay are now on dry land.
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There's a ship right here outside in the middle of what is farmland or...
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It's a forest.
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So, there's quite a small forest here.
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It's just a bit of woodland right outside of this.
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There's farmland.
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So, when they drained the land, they pumped out the water,
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and all of a sudden we started finding all these ships that were sunk.
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What makes this one special?
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Well, first of all, because the ship type is very interesting.
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It's an avatarship.
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It's a very important fishing vessel.
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It was able to transport fish life alive.
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So, the ship, the fish was fresh when it came to shore and was sold.
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Secondly, because the groundwater levels here are lowering.
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So, more of the ship that is underground is not covered in water anymore.
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The parts that are not covered in water will degrade.
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So, we're basically saving the ship from further degradation by documenting it,
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which is what excavating is.
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And thirdly, because we have a lot of students here in the Netherlands
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who would like to learn maritime archaeology.
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And learning it on land is a very good first step.
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So, this is also a good way for a lot of students to be able to learn all the ship parts
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and how to excavate and how to handle wood and fines and all that sort of stuff.
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Wow, there's a no-flood in there.
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So, I'm going to go back step one.
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So, this was a boat that before we had refrigeration or anything like that,
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this fisherman will go out and normally we'd sold the fish when he called them
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and that left a taste.
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But these guys through call the fish and dump them into basically a tank
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at the bottom of the ship itself.
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Okay, I got that right in the middle of the ship.
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That presents some engineering challenges, I imagine.
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How common are these water ships in the Netherlands?
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There's about 40 known right now.
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They were only in the Netherlands and only in the South of J.
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So, it's a very rare ship type, actually.
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We have excavated around 40-ish.
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We have done some excavation, not a full excavation, but some.
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So, this is not only common.
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No, okay.
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You're going to preserve this digitally you were saying.
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So, can you tell us a bit about that process?
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Yeah, so we use several different kinds of scans here.
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We have been working on a ship for four years and every single year,
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we have taken a photogrammetry scan, which means we use the drone to fly over the ship
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and take a lot of pictures.
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And a computer program takes those pictures and makes it into a 3D model,
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which means that we have four 3D models that are visible online,
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that show how what our progress was at the end of every year that we excavated here.
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Then we have another scan that we did for the first time this year.
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It was a LiDAR scan of the shipwreck, which is also a 3D scan,
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but maybe with a little more detail.
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And for all the separate parts of the shipwreck that we took out,
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we make a very detailed scan with an R-tec scanner, which is a handheld scanner
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that also uses many pictures and a little bit of laser to
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make a 3D model.
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Again, we use that 3D model as basically our end product of what we do with that wood.
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So it's basically just a digital copy of the wood.
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We also draw in it to present the details and then we don't really need the real wood anymore.
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It would be great to have the real wood.
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There's just money restrictions and space restrictions.
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Would you not make it available for people to buy, to fund further,
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can't serve your tree work?
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I don't think that would be ethically bright.
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Who pays for all of this?
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The government and also the province.
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And how did you get involved in archaeology?
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I was looking around for studies and I liked this one so I started studying it.
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I had no real previous interest in any of it.
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But when I got to this field school my first year I went here.
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I fell in love with maritime archaeology and now I've been here for another two years.
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So it's good. It's a good field school.
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So you mentioned just in passing that it's good for people to do that on dry land.
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What do you mean by that?
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Is most of your research then done on the water?
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Yeah, most of maritime research is done on the water or through 3D scans that we do from a boat.
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But you need a lot of diving experience and certain certifications.
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And it's just good to learn the beginnings of it on land,
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which is where most archaeologists start their studies anyway.
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Or I've got to ask, do we know the name of the ship?
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We do not. We have no name.
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There's still a small chance that it's on the outside of the ship,
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which we haven't seen yet, but I don't think there will be a name.
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And there's no records of on this day year of our Lord Baba,
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or this type of ship is so common that a loss wouldn't be recorded.
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No, it's not that. It's that for paper documentation,
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this is early 16th century ship.
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There isn't a lot of paper documentation,
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but any of this about shipping.
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So you're not often going to find a name for it,
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even for bigger ships you won't really find a name.
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It really has to be an event where the ship actually sank
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and being a newspaper, it's really hard to find names of ships.
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It's very rare.
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So ship loss was just a regular and official occurrence?
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I'm not too knowledgeable about this,
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but I'm going to say it probably would be worth a death notice maybe,
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but writing an article in a paper costs money.
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So it depends.
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You have some models here. Can you tell me what these are?
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And then I'm going to wrap this interview up.
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But if you want to basically describe this for the listening audience,
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very important, I will have pictures in the show notes just by the way.
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So in the first year, we excavated here.
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We excavated only the back part of the ship,
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which means it's really just a mess in that we call it a Mikado,
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which is a children's game.
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I don't know if that's a published thing as well.
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So we call it Mikado because all the planks and beams and all the other elements of the ship,
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they kind of fell down and fell over each other and it just fell apart.
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In the back of the ship as well, it fell apart.
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So usually you have the ship and both sides are standing up.
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In our ship wreck, both sides are laying down and it kind of fell apart
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towards the really back part of the ship.
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Yeah, more than likely if you say a dot word about a ship,
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it's going to be the same word in English.
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Just a top tip.
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Yeah, there's different elements.
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There's also a Brad spill in there, which was used to roll up ropes usually,
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maybe for an anchor or for a fishing net.
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We don't know it fell down.
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And then the year after we excavated also the front of the ship,
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where we could see more of the construction in length of the ship
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for security of the ship so it doesn't fall apart.
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Also held together the internal construction yet.
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Exactly that.
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And there wouldn't be planks are overlaid over each other and then in between the
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held together with trusses.
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Yes, yeah, okay.
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Just filling in for what I'm looking at here.
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And I guess that's when this being here that you have
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that held up the mast was found.
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So it's right down here.
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It's you can see it in this one.
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It's in the middle of the ship.
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Seemed from starboard's quartz side.
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It's in the middle of the ship and then it's in the front side of the ship.
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Right in front of the life well.
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Oh yeah, that's it there.
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That's it back at the back.
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Okay, yeah, a lot further back than I would have thought.
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Yeah.
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But now makes more sense now that we've seen photos of where the sail was.
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Okay, good.
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Exactly.
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So the sail was in the front of the ship.
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It helps with steering and with pulling.
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The ship was very much meant to be pulling.
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So the front of the ship was also more in a round shape
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and the back ship in more in a sharp shape
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to help that function.
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In the middle of the ship we have the life well.
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It's divided in two compartments and that's where the fish were kept.
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That's where the fish were kept.
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And they were in like brine water as well.
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Just the same was was there a hole between the outside and the inside or?
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So there are very many tiny little holes in the outside of the ship
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in the hole in a location of the life well.
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So the water that the ship was sailing in could just come into the ship
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in that compartment so it's continuous fresh water streaming water
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to keep the fish alive for oxygen and everything else.
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I needless to say that those were separate from the rest of the ship I imagine
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or as a sink.
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Yeah, otherwise you don't have a ship, you have a ship wreck.
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Well, speaking of which, do we know what happened?
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Does it become a ship wreck?
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No, we don't.
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There's no obvious cannonball size hole on the side or anything.
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Go on, say that's long.
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I've pulled marks or that would be really cool.
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No, we don't.
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There's a theory about maybe something else sailed into the back of the ship.
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Yeah, rammed it and that's maybe why it fell apart.
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Although that's a common occurrence in shipwrecks that the back of it falls apart
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or the front of it falls apart.
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Yeah, I'm trying to fast storm.
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Yeah, they could have been the storm.
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So it could have been that that damage occurred to the collision
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or during the as it sank.
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How deep would it have been back in the day?
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The water.
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Yeah.
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Oh, funnily enough about as high as the top of the life.
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Well, so I don't know exactly measurements,
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but I think about two or three meters.
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So it's a location where it's sad.
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Yeah, yeah, which is pretty close to sure.
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So it's quite likely the sailors just swam home
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or was swimming a thing that we did back then.
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I don't actually know.
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It depends on the sailor, I think.
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And if there was a storm, it's kind of like...
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I'll tell you what, for the sake of this narrative,
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everybody's got home safe and we all learned a valuable lesson
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about buildings spending more attention to go out and windy weather.
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Look, this has been fantastic.
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It's been super interesting seeing all the buildings,
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all the construction work here and stuff.
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And thank you very much for your time.
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Well, thank you, too.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio
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at Hacker Public Radio does work.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listening like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts,
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you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by
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an honesthost.com, the internet archive, and our syncs.net.
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On the Sadois stages, today's show is released
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under Creative Commons' Attribution 4.0 International License.
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