Google "Pykrete" and you'll find a wealth of information
about this odd bit of history.

http://www.cabinetmagazine.org/issues/7/floatingisland.php

K.

-----Original Message-----
From: Jed Rothwell [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, May 03, 2005 11:52 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: BLP implementation path


Standing Bear wrote:

>Conversely, the British once fully funded studies on a
>battleship made of ice, purely to mollify a fearful public during the depths
>of World War II.

I believe that was an aircraft carrier made of ice mixed with sawdust and 
or ground-up newspaper. It was to be deployed in the far north Atlantic to 
cover the "air gap" where German U-boats could operate without being 
intercepted by long-range British aircraft. It would not be a highly mobile 
aircraft carrier in the usual sense, but rather a large man-made island 
that could be towed to any location and anchored. The craft would have had 
internal freezers to replenish the ice as it melted. Ice mixed with sawdust 
is incredibly tough material. It could easily withstand a German torpedo 
strike.

It was actually a sensible proposal, but it was no longer needed after the 
US began launching small "jeep" aircraft carriers made from converted 
freighters that carried a couple dozen aircraft. (The British called them 
"Woolworth" carriers.)

The proposal was not put forth to mollify the public. It was top secret. It 
was pursued because it appealed to Winston Churchill.

- Jed



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