Sonar shows corrosion at Port of Alaska with new clarity
Until now, routine inspections at low-tide have been the only way to locate and assess the progression of the damage. But now they have a new way of looking at the damage: sonar.
Until now, routine inspections at low-tide have been the only way to locate and assess the progression of the damage. But now they have a new way of looking at the damage: sonar.
Some people might have seen melted aluminum, charred wood and a hull filled with disgusting muck. Not Patrick O’Neill. In October 2016, when O’Neill saw the “for sale” sign on what was left of the Odik, a Bristol Bay fishing boat, he saw what it could be.