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Most victims probably never got out of the ship before it sunk. And if they did, Arabs are not famous for their swimming skills, so the quite warm water probably didn't matter anyway. Swedish news says about 1000 dead.
Another tragedy in the magnitude of Titanic that will soon be forgotten.
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So get your Naomi Klein books and move it or I'll seriously bash your faces in! - Supercitizen to stupid students Be kind to the nerdiest guy in school. He will be your boss when you've grown up!
It's a miracle I didn't freeze to death every time I went swimming in a lake in the Laurentian mountains where the water temperature never gets above 70F.
I have played in the water in Pacific NW (and went swimming in it) and I am sure it is never over 70F.
JM
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Jon Miller- I AM.CANADIAN
GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.
Originally posted by KrazyHorse
70F water is not cold enough to create hypothermia in any adult in normal health. Especially when you're treading water/swimming.
You're wrong. When I was in the Army several Ranger trainees died of hypothermia after extended periods in the water. The base is in Florida or all places. If someone can freeze to death in Florida then they can do the same just about any where.
You're wrong. When I was in the Army several Ranger trainees died of hypothermia after extended periods in the water. The base is in Florida or all places. If someone can freeze to death in Florida then they can do the same just about any where.
Not true. The surface water temp around Fla is often under 15C
Again, I relate my experience. Over an hour in the water, temps ~20C. No problems. No loss of circulation, no numbness, no heaviness in the limbs.
Not true. The surface water temp around Fla is often under 15C
Again, I relate my experience. Over an hour in the water, temps ~20C. No problems. No loss of circulation, no numbness, no heaviness in the limbs.
Obviously the Wikpedia article could be a little off for its temperature figures around this time of year, so we may be taking about more like 19C here. In fact I'd trust the newspapers figures more than a Wikpedia article that didn't even definately approximate the extremes for different temperatures in the area, but merely gave a general range.
The point worth making is you only spent 1 hour in the water. The people in question here spent TEN OR MORE HOURS in the water in many cases. This is an entirely different matter as far as hypothermia is concerned. You also swam at least the majority of the whole time you were in the water as far I understand. Major body activity helps raise the body's temperature and prevent it from dropping in the water. Especially for those in the water who were not in perfect shape, significant swimming activity for over ten hours would be extremely difficult, after awhile they probably resorted to mostly floating. Even for those in shape, it was substancially longer until they were rescued in many cases.
The temperature of the water undoubtedly kept the death toll from being even higher, but hypothermia definately took its toll after enough time had elapsed.
Eh. It could be that hypothermia claimed some of the older or younger victims, or some of those in poor circulatory health. But I don't think that any adults in normal condition would have died from hypothermia.
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