Charles Darwin's HMS Beagle to sail again

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
48,412
1,668
113
Naturalist Charles Darwin, one of the people who put the Great into Great Britain, famously sailed around the world on the Royal Navy ship HMS Beagle in the 1830s. He came up with his Theory of Evolution after visiting the Galapagos Islands, now a part of Ecuador, in 1835.

It was the behaviour of the islands' finches that helped him to discover evolution.

Now Beagle is to sail again, after the Beagle Trust said it will build a £5 million replica of the ship..

Darwin's Beagle to sail again: £5m replica will survey oceans with help from NASA craft

By Mark Prigg
11th November 2008
Daily Mail


It was the ship that carried Charles Darwin to the Galapagos Islands nearly 180 years ago, enabling him to make his breakthrough on the theory of evolution.

Now another HMS Beagle will depart on a new voyage of scientific discovery - this time with the help of sat-nav, engines and guidance from space.

The Beagle Trust plans to build a £5 million replica of the 19th-century vessel and use it to research the effects of plankton on the world's oceans.


Vessel of knowledge: The original HMS Beagle on which Charles Darwin sailed. A replica is being built to research the effects of plankton on the world's oceans


It will be guided to algae blooms across the globe with the help of Nasa astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

The charity has finalised its plans and is currently raising funds for its project, scheduled to begin construction within months.

'We are making a lot of progress, and I'm confident we will begin building next year, then set sail in 2010,' said project director Peter McGrath.

The original HMS Beagle took scientist and naturalist Darwin around the world between 1831 and 1836.


Scientist and naturalist: Charles Darwin in 1842 (aged 33)


The voyage gave him the key evidence he needed to develop his theory of evolution by natural selection.

The new vessel will be built in Milford Haven in Wales. She will be identical to Darwin's on the outside - but will contain radar, GPS, two auxiliary diesel engines and lab equipment.

'The only noticable difference from the outside will be a GPS on the mast,' said Mr McGrath.

'However, inside it will be very modern, as obviously we need the latest scientific equipment, and to travel in comfort.'

The Beagle will initially follow the path of Darwin's expedition, crossing the North and South Atlantic, the Pacific and Indian Oceans, round both Cape Horn and the Cape of Good Hope.

It will then begin following large algae blooms, guided by astronauts. Mr McGrath said: 'We were stunned, as Nasa actually came to us and offered to help.

'They will be using their cameras and astronauts on the ISS to spot these blooms, then guiding us towards them.

'We know very little about how these massive areas of algae on the surface interact with the ocean, so we believe we will uncover a lot of firsts.'

Astronaut Michael Barratt will lead the project for Nasa. He said: 'Space stations, square riggers and marine biology: science does not get more exciting than this.'



Discoveries: On the Galapagos islands, Darwin found species such as the giant tortoise (above) and blue-footed booby (below)






Dr Karen James, the HMS Beagle Project's director for science, added: 'We have explored more of the moon than we have of Earth's oceans, and that's still true even after centuries of ocean exploration including the original Beagle voyages.

'The techniques we plan to use can help us discover new species and monitor biological communities as they respond to environmental change such as climate change and ocean acidification.'

The Natural History Museum will open an exhibition about Darwin on Thursday. Darwin: Big Idea, Big Exhibition will trace his work on evolution-and visitors will be able to see some of the specimens the scientist discovered during his journey aboard the Beagle.

Voyage of discovery that changed our view of the world






The ship

HMS Beagle was a 90.3 ft-long Cherokee class 10-gun brigsloop of the Royal Navy, She was launched on 11 May 1820 at Woolwich Dockyard at a cost of £7,803.

The vessel lay unused for five years before being reassigned as a research vessel and sailing on three expeditions, the second of which carried Darwin. She was scrapped in 1870.


The route

The Beagle set sail on its most famous expedition on the 27th of December 1831. She first sailed across the Atlantic Ocean then carried out hydrographic surveys around the coast of South America, before stopping at the Galapagos Islands on 15 September 1835. She returned via Tahiti and Australia, reaching England on 2 October 1836.


The theory

Darwin discovered that evolution occurs by natural selection, whereby species with characteristics best suited to their environment survive and pass on these attributes to their offspring.

While at the Galapagos, he found 13 varieties of finch on different islands, some that ate insects, others that ate seeds. He realised they were descendants of a single ancestor species that dispersed across the islands then adapted to the different foods available on each.

dailymail.co.uk
 

scratch

Senate Member
May 20, 2008
5,658
22
38
Naturalist Charles Darwin, one of the people who put the Great into Great Britain, famously sailed around the world on the Royal Navy ship HMS Beagle in the 1830s. He came up with his Theory of Evolution after visiting the Galapagos Islands, now a part of Ecuador, in 1835.

It was the behaviour of the islands' finches that helped him to discover evolution.

Now Beagle is to sail again, after the Beagle Trust said it will build a £5 million replica of the ship..

Darwin's Beagle to sail again: £5m replica will survey oceans with help from NASA craft

By Mark Prigg
11th November 2008
Daily Mail


It was the ship that carried Charles Darwin to the Galapagos Islands nearly 180 years ago, enabling him to make his breakthrough on the theory of evolution.

Now another HMS Beagle will depart on a new voyage of scientific discovery - this time with the help of sat-nav, engines and guidance from space.

The Beagle Trust plans to build a £5 million replica of the 19th-century vessel and use it to research the effects of plankton on the world's oceans.


Vessel of knowledge: The original HMS Beagle on which Charles Darwin sailed. A replica is being built to research the effects of plankton on the world's oceans


It will be guided to algae blooms across the globe with the help of Nasa astronauts aboard the International Space Station.

The charity has finalised its plans and is currently raising funds for its project, scheduled to begin construction within months.

'We are making a lot of progress, and I'm confident we will begin building next year, then set sail in 2010,' said project director Peter McGrath.

The original HMS Beagle took scientist and naturalist Darwin around the world between 1831 and 1836.


Scientist and naturalist: Charles Darwin in 1842 (aged 33)


The voyage gave him the key evidence he needed to develop his theory of evolution by natural selection.

The new vessel will be built in Milford Haven in Wales. She will be identical to Darwin's on the outside - but will contain radar, GPS, two auxiliary diesel engines and lab equipment.

'The only noticable difference from the outside will be a GPS on the mast,' said Mr McGrath.

'However, inside it will be very modern, as obviously we need the latest scientific equipment, and to travel in comfort.'

The Beagle will initially follow the path of Darwin's expedition, crossing the North and South Atlantic, the Pacific and Indian Oceans, round both Cape Horn and the Cape of Good Hope.

It will then begin following large algae blooms, guided by astronauts. Mr McGrath said: 'We were stunned, as Nasa actually came to us and offered to help.

'They will be using their cameras and astronauts on the ISS to spot these blooms, then guiding us towards them.

'We know very little about how these massive areas of algae on the surface interact with the ocean, so we believe we will uncover a lot of firsts.'

Astronaut Michael Barratt will lead the project for Nasa. He said: 'Space stations, square riggers and marine biology: science does not get more exciting than this.'



Discoveries: On the Galapagos islands, Darwin found species such as the giant tortoise (above) and blue-footed booby (below)






Dr Karen James, the HMS Beagle Project's director for science, added: 'We have explored more of the moon than we have of Earth's oceans, and that's still true even after centuries of ocean exploration including the original Beagle voyages.

'The techniques we plan to use can help us discover new species and monitor biological communities as they respond to environmental change such as climate change and ocean acidification.'

The Natural History Museum will open an exhibition about Darwin on Thursday. Darwin: Big Idea, Big Exhibition will trace his work on evolution-and visitors will be able to see some of the specimens the scientist discovered during his journey aboard the Beagle.

Voyage of discovery that changed our view of the world






The ship

HMS Beagle was a 90.3 ft-long Cherokee class 10-gun brigsloop of the Royal Navy, She was launched on 11 May 1820 at Woolwich Dockyard at a cost of £7,803.

The vessel lay unused for five years before being reassigned as a research vessel and sailing on three expeditions, the second of which carried Darwin. She was scrapped in 1870.


The route

The Beagle set sail on its most famous expedition on the 27th of December 1831. She first sailed across the Atlantic Ocean then carried out hydrographic surveys around the coast of South America, before stopping at the Galapagos Islands on 15 September 1835. She returned via Tahiti and Australia, reaching England on 2 October 1836.


The theory

Darwin discovered that evolution occurs by natural selection, whereby species with characteristics best suited to their environment survive and pass on these attributes to their offspring.

While at the Galapagos, he found 13 varieties of finch on different islands, some that ate insects, others that ate seeds. He realised they were descendants of a single ancestor species that dispersed across the islands then adapted to the different foods available on each.

dailymail.co.uk
B.L.---scratch here,

I thoroughly enjoyed the article and think that an ancient ship with such an overwhelming history can be revived and put to sea again to make more discoveries.

Sincere Regards,
scratch
 

SirJosephPorter

Time Out
Nov 7, 2008
11,956
56
48
Ontario
We are visiting the Galapagos Islands in January 2009, and I am looking forward to it. My wife is a doctor, and she is attending a continuing education cruise of the Galapagos Islands.

Darwin made his voyage in 1836. Some of the giant turtles he saw are still alive today (typically they live up to 200 years, unless killed by poachers and hunters).

They have a Charles Darwin Research Institute on one of the Islands.