Animations
& Simulations/ Essex
CineNova, a documentary production company located
in Toronto, requested an engineering analysis and
supporting computer animation for their Discovery
Channel production investigating the Whaleship ESSEX
incident. The story of the ESSEX involves the
sinking of the whaleship in 1820 by a seemingly
enraged giant sperm whale. A famous detailed
narrative of the alleged incident was written by the
ship’s first-mate Owen Chase. The incident was also
the inspiration for Herman Melville’s Moby Dick.
CineNova asked JMS to examine from a technical,
engineering viewpoint the feasibility of a whale of
the size reported by Chase, swimming at the reported
velocity to actually sink a vessel of the ESSEX’s
design. Chase estimated the whale to be 85 feet long
and weigh 80 tons – the ESSEX itself was only 87
feet long.
JMS concluded that the ESSEX most likely would have
resisted and survived the impact from the whale if
at the time, the vessel were newly constructed or at
least of relatively young age. The hull of the
238-ton ESSEX had been heavily worked in her 20 plus
years at sea. Therefore its bottom structure could
very likely have failed when rammed by the whale.
The method of construction of the ESSEX – typical of
wooden vessels of her type – was planks attached by
pegs (trunnels or “tree nails”) to internal frames
made up of wooden pieces also pegged together. The
structural failure probably resulted because pieces
of the built-up frame construction had worked loose
over time and sheared apart under the whale’s
impact. JMS developed animations consisting of a
series of wireframe visuals depicting the vessel and
whale, their relative sizes and trajectories, and
realistic, animated, exploded diagrams showing the
inner details of how the vessel was constructed. The
documentary, Moby Dick: The True Story, aired
internationally in July 2002 on the Discovery
Channel.
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