I'm doing a project for Grade 11 World History right now, and I chose the topic of German u-boats... We're currently studying World War II.
Apparently the deisel powered subs (u-boats) left a trail of bubbles on the surface of the water, making them trackable. One of the only ways to effectively track them, actually. They used satellite images to follow the green line of deisel-smog.
BTW, if I start to not make sense or spew out complete BS, blame my History teacher, not me, I wasn't there to experience and see it for myself.
I'm trying to look up some interesting pictures of german uboats to stick on the web page. That's the assignment (project), we have to construct a web page and stick info on there. Really easy. He even said we can copy/paste (I probably won't though) all the info we need. I don't see the point in this history project though if we can just copy/paste everything and all we have to do is make a web page!
Most of the people in my class aren't half as good as I am at computers, and they've almost all finished their projects already (ahead of time). It's so bloody easy to make a web page it's not even funny! The teacher showed the class how to do it, above all things... In Word too! :Q
Anyways...
Today's class was really interesting, he just talked to the class about WWII uboats and naval warfare pretty much... It was cool. Ah damn what were those things called, I forget... They were like plane thingies but they weren't armed, they just flew up so they could spot the subs from above. And then they had depth charges and torpedoes which they could then (once they spot one) drop on a sub.
I also heard, that at times the uboat would be waiting at the bottom, with everything turned completely off so they couldn't be heard, while the boats above were trying to figure out where they were. And if the people in the uboat would hear a splash or something, they knew that they were dropping depth charges and "braced for impact" pretty much.
Man just imagine being a sitting duck- ...... sub at the bottom of the ocean, and hearing the splash of a depth charge being dropped into the water. Eeek!
There were two main "huge mofo german boats" pretty much as I recall, the Bizmark and something else which I can't remember.
There are a lot of very cool/interesting (and scary) stories behind many of the ships and uboats of World War II.
Man that must have sucked so bad back then during that war... I wonder if WWIII will break out.
If it does, I can imagine that we'd all be quickly obliterated (or something along those lines).
...As long as I don't die a slow, torturous and agonizing pitiful death, then it's coo.
Hold on a second... I'm reading up on some site, and I see Bizmarck. Is it "Bizmark" or "Bizmarck"? Bizmarck seems really wrong to me, is it just me, or am I just a moron? :-\
Well I'm going to stop inanely babbling like a mindless baboon now, good night.
-RSI
PS: If anybody has any good info/pictures regarding u-boats, I'm all ears (email me).
Apparently the deisel powered subs (u-boats) left a trail of bubbles on the surface of the water, making them trackable. One of the only ways to effectively track them, actually. They used satellite images to follow the green line of deisel-smog.
BTW, if I start to not make sense or spew out complete BS, blame my History teacher, not me, I wasn't there to experience and see it for myself.
I'm trying to look up some interesting pictures of german uboats to stick on the web page. That's the assignment (project), we have to construct a web page and stick info on there. Really easy. He even said we can copy/paste (I probably won't though) all the info we need. I don't see the point in this history project though if we can just copy/paste everything and all we have to do is make a web page!
Most of the people in my class aren't half as good as I am at computers, and they've almost all finished their projects already (ahead of time). It's so bloody easy to make a web page it's not even funny! The teacher showed the class how to do it, above all things... In Word too! :Q
Anyways...
Today's class was really interesting, he just talked to the class about WWII uboats and naval warfare pretty much... It was cool. Ah damn what were those things called, I forget... They were like plane thingies but they weren't armed, they just flew up so they could spot the subs from above. And then they had depth charges and torpedoes which they could then (once they spot one) drop on a sub.
I also heard, that at times the uboat would be waiting at the bottom, with everything turned completely off so they couldn't be heard, while the boats above were trying to figure out where they were. And if the people in the uboat would hear a splash or something, they knew that they were dropping depth charges and "braced for impact" pretty much.
Man just imagine being a sitting duck- ...... sub at the bottom of the ocean, and hearing the splash of a depth charge being dropped into the water. Eeek!
There were two main "huge mofo german boats" pretty much as I recall, the Bizmark and something else which I can't remember.
Man that must have sucked so bad back then during that war... I wonder if WWIII will break out.
...As long as I don't die a slow, torturous and agonizing pitiful death, then it's coo.
Hold on a second... I'm reading up on some site, and I see Bizmarck. Is it "Bizmark" or "Bizmarck"? Bizmarck seems really wrong to me, is it just me, or am I just a moron? :-\
Well I'm going to stop inanely babbling like a mindless baboon now, good night.
-RSI
PS: If anybody has any good info/pictures regarding u-boats, I'm all ears (email me).
