MS World Discoverer

MS World Discoverer was a cruise ship designed for and built by Schichau Unterweser, Germany in 1974. During construction called BEWA Discoverer, the ship was completed in Bremerhaven, Germany.

Wreck of MS World Discoverer as of July 2007
History
Name: World Discoverer (1975–2000)
Owner:
  • BEWA Cruises (Denmark) (1974–1976)
  • Adventurer Cruises (1976–2000)[1]
Port of registry:
Yard number: 2250
Launched: 8 December 1973[2]
Acquired: 19 October 1975[2]
Refit: 1996
Identification:
Fate: Wrecked 30 April 2000 after striking an uncharted reef in the Sandfly Passage
General characteristics
Type: Cruise ship[1]
Displacement: 3,724 GT
Length: 87.51 m (287 ft 1 in)
Beam: 15.12 m (49 ft 7 in)
Draft: 4.4 m (14 ft)
Depth: 8.72 m (28.6 ft)
Decks: 7
Installed power: 2 ×  MaK 8M452AK (2 × 1,760 kW)
Propulsion: Single propeller
Speed: 16.5 knots (30.6 km/h; 19.0 mph)
Capacity: 137 passengers in 76 cabins
Crew: 75 to 80
Wreck site
Coordinates: 9°01′23.17″S 160°07′22.91″E

History

The vessel was originally built as the BEWA Discoverer in 1974.[3] The ship was sold to BEWA Cruises out of Denmark. In July 1976, the vessel was sold to Adventure Cruises, Inc. and was renamed World Discoverer. The ship also became a long-term charter to Society Expeditions. In 1976, the ship was registered in Singapore. In 1987, Society Expedition came under new ownership and was renamed Society Expedition Cruises, with offices in Seattle, United States and Germany. The new owner of the ship was Discoverer Reederei who also has ownership of other vessels, such as MV Explorer. In 1990, she was registered in Liberia under the name World Discoverer. The vessel had a double hull construction, allowing for periodic voyages to the Antarctic polar regions to allow its passengers to observe ice floe movements and providing protection for minor impacts. In 1996, the ship was refurbished under the new name, World Discoverer. The ship carried a fleet of inflatable dinghies, allowing passengers to move closer to ice floes for observation.[4]

Service history

World Discoverer in 1978
World Discoverer at port in Ua Pou, in the Marquesas Islands, French Polynesia
World Discoverer anchored in South Georgia

During the period from November through February (Austral summer), the ship conducted cruises in the Southern Hemisphere and visited places like Antarctica, the Falkland Islands, Chile and Argentina. From March to May and August to October, the ship cruised the South Pacific Islands. Between the months of June and August, the ship cruised around the Alaskan region and also the Russian border around the Bering Sea. World Discoverer was classified as a Swedish/Finnish 1A Ice Class, allowing the ship to withstand minor floe impacts.[5] The World Discoverer also had a 13,000 km (8,100 mi) cruising range, allowing the ship to travel the Northwest Passage.

The ship was captained by Oliver Kruess, who had previously crewed as chief mate. Society Expeditions also hired a small team of experienced expedition leaders to answer tourist questions concerning the region, ice floes, their movements, and the ship's destinations. A small fleet of dinghies landed passengers on various shorelines for observation of local wildlife in the area. Each day comprised typically two to three shore expeditions, led by geologists, historians, naturalists, and marine biologists. The ship was equipped with an observation lounge, medical center with an active physician, library, sun deck with a small swimming pool, small fitness center, and a lecture hall.[6]

Wreck

On 30 April 2000, at 4 p.m. local time (0500 GMT), the ship struck a large uncharted rock or reef in the Sandfly Passage, Solomon Islands. Captain Kruess sent a distress signal, which was received in Honiara, the Solomon Islands' capital city. A passenger ferry was dispatched to the ship and all passengers were then transported to safety. The captain then brought the ship into Roderick Bay after the ship began to list 20 degrees and grounded it to avoid sinking. After underwater surveying of the ship, World Discoverer was declared a constructive loss. The ship has remained in Roderick Bay ever since.[7]

Michael Lomax, president of Society Expeditions, congratulated the captain and crew for their heroic and professional actions, saying that they performed in an "exemplary manner" during the crisis. The ship was scheduled to have its annual dry-dock inspection on 11 May when annual maintenance work would have been completed. Also planned were the addition of two additional suites on the boat deck and also the installation of a new fire protection system throughout the ship.[8]

Aftermath

World Discoverer still sits in Roderick Bay of the Nggela Islands with a 46° list. The closest salvage companies, stationed in Australia, found the ship ransacked by locals and other factions. The Solomon Islands were undergoing civil war at the time. Tidal activity damaged the ship even more. The ship has been sustaining surface rusting with many of the windows removed. The ship became a tourist attraction with the locals of the island as well as other cruise lines that pass by World Discoverer, including MV Princess II.[9] A salvage was attempted in 2000 but "abandoned after shots were exchanged with the local tribe."[10]

In the aftermath of the wreck, Society Expedition refurbished an ice-class vessel called World Discoverer, and it was launched in 2002, resuming cruises. Society Expedition ceased operations in June 2004 after their new vessel was seized by creditors in Nome, Alaska. Two weeks later, it filed for chapter 7 liquidation bankruptcy.[11]

gollark: ```haskellmain :: IO ()main = putStrLn "Hacked with Haskell. Haskell is good for this, because nobody understands it."```
gollark: ```rustfn main() { println!("Hacked with Rust.");}```
gollark: ```fsharpprintfn "Hacked with %s" "F#"```
gollark: ```pythonprint("Hacked with python 3")```
gollark: ```print "Hacked with Python 2 or Lua"```

References

  1. Equasis
  2. "MS World Discoverer". faktaomfartyg.se (in Swedish). Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  3. "M/S World Discoverer" (PDF). knudehansen.com. Archived from the original on 20 October 2007. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  4. "Shipping News: Year 2000 passenger ship and cruise news from around the world". Maritime Matters. Archived from the original on 3 January 2010. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  5. "World Discoverer (2002)". Newzeal.com. Retrieved 18 January 2012.
  6. "Society Expeditions". smallshipcruises.com. Archived from the original on 9 December 2003. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  7. "Google Maps". Google. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  8. "World Discoverer' Damaged in Pacific Incident". aad.gov.au. 10 May 2000. Archived from the original on 20 July 2008. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  9. Diaz, Jesus (24 June 2011). "Oh Look, There's a Dead Cruise Ship In Google Maps". Gizmodo.com. Retrieved 26 March 2020.
  10. TMC Marine presentation TMC Marine (4 July 2019). Retrieved on 2019-07-11.
  11. "Society Expeditions files for bankruptcy". The Seattle Times. 1 July 2004. Archived from the original on 14 August 2004. Retrieved 18 January 2012.
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