USNS Eltanin

USNS Eltanin (T-AK-270/T-AGOR-8) was an Eltanin-class cargo ship with an ice-breaking hull acquired by the U.S. Navy in 1957 and then operated by the Navy in a non-commissioned status, named after Eltanin, a star in the constellation Draco. Her designation was changed to that of an oceanographic research ship in 1962 when she operated in Antarctic waters.

History
United States
NameUSS Eltanin
NamesakeA star in the constellation Draco
BuilderAvondale Marine Ways, Inc., Avondale, Louisiana
Laid downdate unknown as type (C1-ME2-13a) hull
Launched16 January 1957
Acquiredby the U.S. Navy, October 1957
In serviceOctober 1957 by MSTS as USNS Eltanin (T-AK-270)
Out of servicedate unknown
ReclassifiedOceanographic Research Vessel (T-AGOR-8), 23 August 1962
Strickennot known
Fatetransferred to Argentina in 1974
History
Argentina
NameARA Islas Orcadas
Acquired1974
FateScrapped, 1979
General characteristics
Typecargo ship (icebreaker)
Tonnage1,850 tons
Displacement3,886 tons
Length266'
Beam52'
Draft18'
Propulsiondiesel electric, two shafts, 3,200hp
Speed13 knots
Complement18 civilians, 15 scientific party, 6 Navy
Armamentnone indicated

Construction

Eltanin (T-AK-270) was launched on 16 January 1957 by Avondale Marine Ways, Inc., Avondale, Louisiana. She was turned over to the Military Sea Transportation Service (MSTS) in October 1957 for operation in a noncommissioned status.

Conversion to research ship

During 1961 and 1962, Eltanin was modified throughout at a New York shipyard to fill a new role as a floating laboratory. Former cargo spaces were replaced with labs, workshops, and staterooms for scientists, and further labs were added above decks. Anti-roll tanks were also added, along with protective bulwarks. On 23 August 1962 her classification was changed to Oceanographic Research Vessel and designated T-AGOR-8.

Antarctic duty

Eltanin was assigned to the National Science Foundation to support the Foundation's Antarctic Research Program with the ship operated by the Military Sea Transportation Service.[1] The ship worked in the Antarctic Ocean becoming the first Antarctic research ship to do so. After two shakedown cruises in the Atlantic Ocean and a positioning cruise with further testing en route, Eltanin operated a total of 52 Antarctic research cruises from July 5, 1962 thru December 29, 1972. Over this time, some 80% of the southern ocean was surveyed, and a total of 400,000 miles traveled.

Some of Eltanin's research cruises collected magnetic profiles of the sea floor that proved to be pivotal evidence in the acceptance of the continental drift theory, by proving the existence of sea floor spreading. These key profiles, which show symmetric bands of alternating magnetic orientation (corresponding to magnetic pole reversals) around various undersea ridges, are known by the ship's name and cruise number (ex. Eltanin-19).

As of mid-1973, Eltanin was laid up in San Francisco Bay, her research career at an end.

Argentine Navy service

In 1974 she was transferred to the Argentine Navy in a 5-year lease and renamed ARA Islas Orcadas.[2]

In 1978 she participated in an expedition in the Weddell Sea during which its crew discovered an igneous underwater formation, baptized Virginia Range.[2]

At the end of the lease period it was returned to the US Navy in Norfolk, Virginia, on 1 August 1979.[2]

Inactivation

Eltanin was placed out of service at an unknown date and struck from the Naval Vessel Register, also at an unknown date, and transferred to the U.S. Maritime Administration for lay up in the National Defense Reserve Fleet.

Eltanin was returned by Argentina in early 1990. USS Eltanin was laid up, pending title transfer for disposal, in the James River anchorage of the National Defense Reserve Fleet (NDRF), on February 21, 1990. The U.S. Navy officially passed title of the vessel to the Maritime Administration on July 2 of that year. MARAD sold Eltanin for scrap on November 22, 1991, and it departed the reserve fleet on March 18, 1992.

See also

References

Notes

  1. Nelson 1971, p. 189.
  2. "Buque Hidrografico A.R.A. "ISLAS ORCADAS"". Histarmar - Historia y Arqueología Marítima (in Spanish). Retrieved 2015-12-29.

Sources

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.