MV Argo Merchant (Redirected from Argo Merchant)

Argo Merchant run aground.jpg
Argo Merchant, aground southeast of Nantucket seen with a silvery oil slick coming from her center holds.
History
Name
  • Argo Merchant (1973)
  • VARI (1970)
  • Permina Samudra III (1968)
  • Arcturus (1953)
OwnerThebes Shipping Inc.
Port of registry Liberia, Monrovia
Builder
Yard number886
Launched5 September 1953
Out of serviceDecember 15, 1976
IdentificationIMO number5022522
FateFoundered/sunk at 41°01′59″N 69°27′00″W / 41.033°N 69.45°W / 41.033; -69.45Coordinates: 41°01′59″N 69°27′00″W / 41.033°N 69.45°W / 41.033; -69.45
Notes
General characteristics
TypeTanker
Tonnage
Length195.5 m (641 ft)
Beam25.7 m (84 ft)
Draught10.6 m (35 ft)
Speed16 knots
Notes

MV Argo Merchant was a Liberian-flagged oil tanker built by Howaldtswerke in Hamburg, Germany, in 1953, most noted for running aground and subsequent sinking southeast of Nantucket Island, Massachusetts, causing one of the largest marine oil spills in history. Throughout the vessel's troubled past, she was involved in more than a dozen major shipping incidents including two other groundings; once in Indonesia while named Permina Samudra III, and again in Sicily while named Vari; and a collision in Japan.

Because of her checkered career and sinking, Argo Merchant was featured in the "worst ship" category in the 1979 publication, The Book of Heroic Failures.

1976 shipwreck

In December 1976, Argo Merchant loaded with 7,700,000 US gallons (29,000,000 l) of No. 6 fuel oil at Puerto La Cruz, Venezuela, sailing for Boston under Captain Georgios Papadopoulos. It was later established that the ship carried two unqualified crew as helmsmen, a broken gyrocompass, inadequate charts, and an inaccurate radio direction finder. At 6 p.m. on 15 December in high winds and 3 m (9.8 ft) seas, the tanker ran aground on Middle Rip Shoal about 29 nautical miles (54 km; 33 mi) southeast of Nantucket and more than 24 nmi (44 km; 28 mi) off her intended course. The thirty-eight members of the crew were evacuated, but the shallow waters and weather conditions made it impossible to offload the oil or salvage the ship. On 21 December 1976, Argo Merchant broke apart and emptied its entire cargo of fuel oil, enough to heat 18,000 homes for a year. Northwesterly winds blew the 60 by 100 nmi (110 by 190 km; 69 by 115 mi) oil slick offshore, and coastal fisheries and beaches were spared the worst.

See also


This page was last updated at 2022-09-03 04:56 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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