Design Noah Ark
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Design Noah Ark
Is it possible to design something equivalent to Noah ark, using modern day technologies?
For design parameters, let's play with something feasible. Like say a seed supply of agricultural food plants, a family of seven and a viable population of food animals ranging from the common(cows, pigs, chickens, sheep) to the exotic(crocodiles and emu). You then have to sustain this population out in the Atlantic for a year with miminal resupply.(say once every 3 month or so)
For design parameters, let's play with something feasible. Like say a seed supply of agricultural food plants, a family of seven and a viable population of food animals ranging from the common(cows, pigs, chickens, sheep) to the exotic(crocodiles and emu). You then have to sustain this population out in the Atlantic for a year with miminal resupply.(say once every 3 month or so)
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Ark designs are helped by the fact that they don't actually have to go anywhere, i.e., they're not a ship so much as a big, seaworthy container. So you won't need engines, propellers or huge exhaust openings.
I'm not a naval engineer, obviously, but you'd want to use techniques that keep the thing upright as that (along with ventilation and sanitation) is going to be your biggest problem. Provided sufficient victuals, maintaining the passengers and animal cargo won't be as problematic as dumping the waste and letting fresh air into a vessel that will almost always (for the first month or so, anyway) be buttoned up tight.
I'm not a naval engineer, obviously, but you'd want to use techniques that keep the thing upright as that (along with ventilation and sanitation) is going to be your biggest problem. Provided sufficient victuals, maintaining the passengers and animal cargo won't be as problematic as dumping the waste and letting fresh air into a vessel that will almost always (for the first month or so, anyway) be buttoned up tight.
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Re: Design Noah Ark
Wouldn't oceangoing sailing ships have something like this, but for a far larger crew, even with a shorter duration? If somehow a wooden galleon can stay afloat and run with seven people, instead of seventy or several hundred, I think it'll be able to pack enough provisions and space for some animals.PainRack wrote:Is it possible to design something equivalent to Noah ark, using modern day technologies?
For design parameters, let's play with something feasible. Like say a seed supply of agricultural food plants, a family of seven and a viable population of food animals ranging from the common(cows, pigs, chickens, sheep) to the exotic(crocodiles and emu). You then have to sustain this population out in the Atlantic for a year with miminal resupply.(say once every 3 month or so)
I point out the Ark only had to last 40 days & nights
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The problem with that idea is that wooden vessels sort of depended upon the topweight of the sails and masts to aid in stability. Dismasted vessels tended to roll in heavy seas.Nephtys wrote:Wouldn't oceangoing sailing ships have something like this, but for a far larger crew, even with a shorter duration? If somehow a wooden galleon can stay afloat and run with seven people, instead of seventy or several hundred, I think it'll be able to pack enough provisions and space for some animals.PainRack wrote:Is it possible to design something equivalent to Noah ark, using modern day technologies?
For design parameters, let's play with something feasible. Like say a seed supply of agricultural food plants, a family of seven and a viable population of food animals ranging from the common(cows, pigs, chickens, sheep) to the exotic(crocodiles and emu). You then have to sustain this population out in the Atlantic for a year with miminal resupply.(say once every 3 month or so)
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No, that was just how long the rain lasted. It was a year before they could land.I point out the Ark only had to last 40 days & nights
As for the OP. It is possible by definition. As you specified that for the purposes of design parameters that the number of organisms was itself "feasible" and consisted only of food animals, plus resupply. In other words, you asked if it was possible to build a ship using modern technologies that could be used by an animal import/export business that could last a while if disabled with comms destroyed
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Slight correction: the rain lasted forty days and nights. The Flood itself lasted a fair bit longer:LadyTevar wrote:I point out the Ark only had to last 40 days & nights
From the Skeptics Annotated Bible.Genesis 7:24 wrote: And the waters prevailed upon the earth an hundred and fifty days.
So, it had to last 40 days of some pretty freaking nasty weather, and still remain afloat for another 150 beyond that.
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Providing food for a viable population of animals of at least dozens, if not hundreds of species will be impossible on a crew of eight people. Cleaning up after them and maintaining sanitation will also be impossible. As will maintaining their environments, maintaining filtration systems, etc.Darth Raptor wrote:Ark designs are helped by the fact that they don't actually have to go anywhere, i.e., they're not a ship so much as a big, seaworthy container. So you won't need engines, propellers or huge exhaust openings.
I'm not a naval engineer, obviously, but you'd want to use techniques that keep the thing upright as that (along with ventilation and sanitation) is going to be your biggest problem. Provided sufficient victuals, maintaining the passengers and animal cargo won't be as problematic as dumping the waste and letting fresh air into a vessel that will almost always (for the first month or so, anyway) be buttoned up tight.
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Topweight of masts is essential in balancing a sailing vessel's centre-of-mass so that she neither rides too low in the water nor would tend to be "crank", i.e. carrying so much sail that she would roll in moderately rough weather. But once this balance is lost by dismasting, a vessel generally becomes uncontrollable as well as unmanoeuverable and will be taken by the swells in the water.Frank Hipper wrote:Uh...Patrick Degan wrote:The problem with that idea is that wooden vessels sort of depended upon the topweight of the sails and masts to aid in stability. Dismasted vessels tended to roll in heavy seas.
More details, please?
One notable example of this principle was the behaviour of HMS Guerriere after she was dismasted by USS Constitution in their famous battle, as that ship rolled and pitched uncontrollably after losing her topweights.
As Commander J. C. Hoseason R.N. wrote in his article "Changes To Be Effected In The Great Britain" for the 1846 shipbuilding periodical Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal:
This tendency was also evident in the behaviour of the frigate Ariel, which nearly foundered in a gale off the Bay of Biscay in October 1780 and only survived when her illustrious captain, John Paul-Jones, had his crew cut away the masts to keep the wind from tipping her completely (as noted in Evan Thomas' John Paul-Jones; Sailor, Hero, And Founder Of The American Navy).It is curious that engineers seem entirely ignorant of the very simple fact that a dismasted ship rolls most dangerously; so much so that, after a general action, it has been hardly possible to stand upon the vessel's deck
The details which were involved in the crafting of a stable sailing vessel are a most fascinating subject to say the least.
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Patrick, I strongly suspect you're confusing the steadying effect of canvas with topweight.Patrick Degan wrote:Topweight of masts is essential in balancing a sailing vessel's centre-of-mass so that she neither rides too low in the water nor would tend to be "crank", i.e. carrying so much sail that she would roll in moderately rough weather. But once this balance is lost by dismasting, a vessel generally becomes uncontrollable as well as unmanoeuverable and will be taken by the swells in the water.
One notable example of this principle was the behaviour of HMS Guerriere after she was dismasted by USS Constitution in their famous battle, as that ship rolled and pitched uncontrollably after losing her topweights.
As Commander J. C. Hoseason R.N. wrote in his article "Changes To Be Effected In The Great Britain" for the 1846 shipbuilding periodical Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal:
This tendency was also evident in the behaviour of the frigate Ariel, which nearly foundered in a gale off the Bay of Biscay in October 1780 and only survived when her illustrious captain, John Paul-Jones, had his crew cut away the masts to keep the wind from tipping her completely (as noted in Evan Thomas' John Paul-Jones; Sailor, Hero, And Founder Of The American Navy).It is curious that engineers seem entirely ignorant of the very simple fact that a dismasted ship rolls most dangerously; so much so that, after a general action, it has been hardly possible to stand upon the vessel's deck
The details which were involved in the crafting of a stable sailing vessel are a most fascinating subject to say the least.
Adding weight above a ship's center of mass lowers it's metacentric height, and reduces stability. A ship with a metacentric height that's too high bobs like a cork; one with a metacentric height that's below the waterline capsizes.
A suite of fore-and-aft rigged sails, when handled correctly, provides a constant force to leeward, helping to reduce roll. Staysails between the masts provide this force in square rigged ships like Guerriere.
BTW, that RN commander who wrote that letter you cited was either an idiot or worked for someone with a stake in manufacturing paddle-driven steamships; his criticism of Great Britain's bilge keels is hilarious, as is his condemnation of a 800 ton screw-steamer being unable to proceed into a storm with 260 horsepower.
Not to mention his argument for paddle wheels adding stability...
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True... I was interested in what kind of technologies we have available that could replicate Noah Ark. It isn't as simple as taking a container ship and sticking it out in the middle of nowhere after all........ the ship has to be able to move to avoid bad storms that will probably kill off animals and considering the large numbers and variety of animals, you're going to need expert medical and zoological expertise on board.Alyrium Denryle wrote:No, that was just how long the rain lasted. It was a year before they could land.I point out the Ark only had to last 40 days & nights
As for the OP. It is possible by definition. As you specified that for the purposes of design parameters that the number of organisms was itself "feasible" and consisted only of food animals, plus resupply. In other words, you asked if it was possible to build a ship using modern technologies that could be used by an animal import/export business that could last a while if disabled with comms destroyed
That reminds me.... I should had edited my post such that the "family" was cargo and not the max crew requirements:D
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I got as far as "by John Woodmorappe".Androsphinx wrote:You mean that none of you have read Noah's Ark: A Feasibility Study?
I'm appalled.
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I guess in this case, you -can- judge a book by its cover.Frank Hipper wrote:I got as far as "by John Woodmorappe".Androsphinx wrote:You mean that none of you have read Noah's Ark: A Feasibility Study?
I'm appalled.
"what huge and loathsome abnormality was the Sphinx originally carven to represent? Accursed is the sight, be it in dream or not, that revealed to me the supreme horror - the Unknown God of the Dead, which licks its colossal chops in the unsuspected abyss, fed hideous morsels by soulless absurdities that should not exist" - Harry Houdini "Under the Pyramids"
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Don't rely on the cover only, please.Androsphinx wrote:I guess in this case, you -can- judge a book by its cover.Frank Hipper wrote:I got as far as "by John Woodmorappe".Androsphinx wrote:You mean that none of you have read Noah's Ark: A Feasibility Study?
I'm appalled.
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No, I am not.Frank Hipper wrote:Patrick, I strongly suspect you're confusing the steadying effect of canvas with topweight.Patrick Degan wrote:Topweight of masts is essential in balancing a sailing vessel's centre-of-mass so that she neither rides too low in the water nor would tend to be "crank", i.e. carrying so much sail that she would roll in moderately rough weather. But once this balance is lost by dismasting, a vessel generally becomes uncontrollable as well as unmanoeuverable and will be taken by the swells in the water.
One notable example of this principle was the behaviour of HMS Guerriere after she was dismasted by USS Constitution in their famous battle, as that ship rolled and pitched uncontrollably after losing her topweights.
As Commander J. C. Hoseason R.N. wrote in his article "Changes To Be Effected In The Great Britain" for the 1846 shipbuilding periodical Iron: An Illustrated Weekly Journal:
This tendency was also evident in the behaviour of the frigate Ariel, which nearly foundered in a gale off the Bay of Biscay in October 1780 and only survived when her illustrious captain, John Paul-Jones, had his crew cut away the masts to keep the wind from tipping her completely (as noted in Evan Thomas' John Paul-Jones; Sailor, Hero, And Founder Of The American Navy).It is curious that engineers seem entirely ignorant of the very simple fact that a dismasted ship rolls most dangerously; so much so that, after a general action, it has been hardly possible to stand upon the vessel's deck
The details which were involved in the crafting of a stable sailing vessel are a most fascinating subject to say the least.
As I am well aware of —one of the reasons why the American attempts at line-battleships were failures.Adding weight above a ship's center of mass lowers it's metacentric height, and reduces stability.
The former is exactly the effect rendered with a dismasted vessel that has lost the topweight of her rig.A ship with a metacentric height that's too high bobs like a cork; one with a metacentric height that's below the waterline capsizes.
I presume you have something in the way of evidence to back the implied Appeal-to-Motive on Capt. Hoseason's criticisms.BTW, that RN commander who wrote that letter you cited was either an idiot or worked for someone with a stake in manufacturing paddle-driven steamships
As for the former, keep in mind that the Great Britain was something entirely new in shipbuilding technology for the time. The vessel was in fact originally conceived as a paddle-wheeler design before I.K. Brunel altered her plan to accomodate the then-new innovation of screw propulsion. To conservative shipwrights and naval officers, such a departure from the tried-and-true pathway of construction would have engendered much criticism and doubt (as the number of naysaying experts similarly said about the USS Monitor when she was first proposed). Also, Capt. Hoseason spoke mostly from his own experience of war at sea with all-sail fighting vessels.
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—Dr. Gregory House
Oil an emergency?! It's about time, Brigadier, that the leaders of this planet of yours realised that to remain dependent upon a mineral slime simply doesn't make sense.
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You cite one instance of a ship having to cut her masts away in a storm, and another of a ship being unsteady after a dismating.Patrick Degan wrote:No, I am not.Frank Hipper wrote:Patrick, I strongly suspect you're confusing the steadying effect of canvas with topweight.
You provide nothing in either example that illustrates why loss of topweight detracted from stability when the loss of canvas in one instance, and presence of canvas in the other is the most likely explanation.
The Ariel example contradicts your topweight assertion.
Patrick, six thousand years of shipbuilding demonstrates the lesson learned of avoiding topweight wherever practical; it's presence has been accepted only because of percieved, or valid, need.As I am well aware of —one of the reasons why the American attempts at line-battleships were failures.Adding weight above a ship's center of mass lowers it's metacentric height, and reduces stability.
Whether that need has been for masts and yards to bend canvas to, provide habitable accommodation, or to provide a vantage point to extend visibility, topweight is added only at the compromise of other charateristics, such as increased beam or decreased freeboard.
A ship that has a quick, "lively" action in a seaway is not neccessarily unstable, depending on usage:The former is exactly the effect rendered with a dismasted vessel that has lost the topweight of her rig.A ship with a metacentric height that's too high bobs like a cork; one with a metacentric height that's below the waterline capsizes.
Do you use "unstable" to mean "not steady" or "in danger of capsizing"?
The importance of that distinction cannot be overstated; one is uncomfortable, the other is dangerous.
The WWII Flower class corvettes are a prime example of a ship built with an uncomfortably high metacentric height, yet whose seaworthiness made them indispensible at a critical time.
Am I required to to demonstrate something beyond the the fact that his arguments for the paddle wheel were recognised as transparently false at the time, and have been completely refuted with 160 years of experience?I presume you have something in the way of evidence to back the implied Appeal-to-Motive on Capt. Hoseason's criticisms.BTW, that RN commander who wrote that letter you cited was either an idiot or worked for someone with a stake in manufacturing paddle-driven steamships
Then you accept that he offered no valid criticism of the propellor, no valid proposal for the paddle-wheel, and is arguing for tradition while ignoring ration?As for the former, keep in mind that the Great Britain was something entirely new in shipbuilding technology for the time. The vessel was in fact originally conceived as a paddle-wheeler design before I.K. Brunel altered her plan to accomodate the then-new innovation of screw propulsion. To conservative shipwrights and naval officers, such a departure from the tried-and-true pathway of construction would have engendered much criticism and doubt (as the number of naysaying experts similarly said about the USS Monitor when she was first proposed). Also, Capt. Hoseason spoke mostly from his own experience of war at sea with all-sail fighting vessels.
The man comes out states his baldfaced anti-science bias in no uncertain terms, after all.
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If you gut the original scenario the way you have, then barring the size of the vessel, it would then be rather easy to do. Refrigeration, environment chambers, the technology is easy if you have such a limited number of species on board with sufficient crew. You could literally lash barges together.PainRack wrote:True... I was interested in what kind of technologies we have available that could replicate Noah Ark. It isn't as simple as taking a container ship and sticking it out in the middle of nowhere after all........ the ship has to be able to move to avoid bad storms that will probably kill off animals and considering the large numbers and variety of animals, you're going to need expert medical and zoological expertise on board.Alyrium Denryle wrote:No, that was just how long the rain lasted. It was a year before they could land.I point out the Ark only had to last 40 days & nights
As for the OP. It is possible by definition. As you specified that for the purposes of design parameters that the number of organisms was itself "feasible" and consisted only of food animals, plus resupply. In other words, you asked if it was possible to build a ship using modern technologies that could be used by an animal import/export business that could last a while if disabled with comms destroyed
That reminds me.... I should had edited my post such that the "family" was cargo and not the max crew requirements:D
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Limited number of species? Aren't there something like 40 species of food animals?Alyrium Denryle wrote: If you gut the original scenario the way you have, then barring the size of the vessel, it would then be rather easy to do. Refrigeration, environment chambers, the technology is easy if you have such a limited number of species on board with sufficient crew. You could literally lash barges together.
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Yeah. You can support them on barges lashed together. Makes it even easier because MOST of the animals used for food have been selectively bred to be able to live in the most unpleasant environments possible.PainRack wrote:Limited number of species? Aren't there something like 40 species of food animals?Alyrium Denryle wrote: If you gut the original scenario the way you have, then barring the size of the vessel, it would then be rather easy to do. Refrigeration, environment chambers, the technology is easy if you have such a limited number of species on board with sufficient crew. You could literally lash barges together.
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