• mindbleach
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    2 days ago

    Wasn’t someone trying to buy it for another purpose?

    How did they get outbid by a watery grave?

    • Captain Aggravated
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      2 days ago

      My understanding is there was a decades long conga line of rich idiots in golf shorts thinking they were going to turn the ship into a mall or hotel or whatever, sometimes pouring enough cash to pay the dock rent for a little while longer, and even that has come to an end.

      • mindbleach
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        2 days ago

        And it’s not prewar steel, so it’s not a big pile of medical-grade scrap.

        Shame.

        • Captain Aggravated
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          2 days ago

          Does it count if it’s above the water?

          I’m aware of the whole slavaging shipwrecks because steel made before WWII doesn’t have nuclear fallout in it" thing but, for example the USS North Carolina, BB-55, currently a museum ship sitting in the mud next to the Cape Fear river in Wilmington, she was built in the early days of the war, before America entered the war, is she “pre-war steel?” She’s been in the atmosphere with every detonated nuke and melted down power plant.

          • mindbleach
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            2 days ago

            Atmosphere doesn’t make cold steel radioactive. The problem is production - impurities are removed through oxidation, i.e., blowing a whole lot of air through molten iron. We take the result from from wrecked ships because nobody’s using them for anything else.

            … huh. Wikipedia says it doesn’t even matter nowadays. Background radiation levels are tolerable for instrumentation.