[139857] in SIPB IPv6
Your Safety Can't Wait
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (TacRight Military Proguard)
Wed Apr 1 11:43:17 2026
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Date: Wed, 1 Apr 2026 17:13:15 +0200
From: "TacRight Military Proguard" <PrepperGadget@wildsfood.shop>
Reply-To: "DIY mask" <TacRightMilitaryProguard@wildsfood.shop>
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
Message-ID: <h013ijgdbvsaqhh3-ebnr04hh0pkbu64h-3d767-204e1@wildsfood.shop>
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Your Safety Can't Wait
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ext expedition to spot the island was in 1808 by James Lindsay, captain of the Samuel Enderby & Sons' (SE&S) snow whaler Swan. Swan and another Enderby whaler, Otter, were in company when they reached the island and recorded its position, though they were unable to land.:?434–435? Lindsay could confirm that the "cape" was indeed an island.:?62? The next expedition to arrive at the island was American Benjamin Morrell and his seal hunting ship Wasp. Morrell, by his own account, found the island without difficulty (with "improbable ease", in the words of historian William Mills):?434–435? before landing and hunting 196 seals.:?62? In his subsequent lengthy description, Morrell does not mention the island's most obvious physical feature: Its permanent ice cover.:?106–107? This has caused some commentators to doubt whether he actually visited the island.:?434–435?
On 10 December 1825, SE&S's George Norris, master of the sealer Sprightly, landed on the island,:?62? named it Liverpool Island and claimed it for the British Crown and George IV on 16 December.:?63? The next expedition to spot the island was Joseph Fuller and his ship Francis Allyn in 1893, but he was not able to land on the island. German Carl Chun's Valdivia Expedition arrived at the island in 1898. They were not able to land, but dredged the seabed for geological samples. They were also the first to accurately fix the island's position.:?63? At least three sealing vessels visited the island between 1822 and 1895. A voyage of exploration in 1927–1928 also took seal pelts.
Norris also spotted a second island in 1825, which he named Thompson Island, which he placed 72 km (45 mi; 39 nmi) north-northeast of Liverpool Island. Thompson Island was also reported in 1893 by Fuller, but in 1898 Chun did not report seeing such an island, nor has anyone since. However, Thompson Island continued to appear on maps as late as 1943. A 1967 paper suggested that the island might have disappeared in an undetected volcanic eruption, but in 1997 it was discovered that the ocean is more than 2,400 m (7,900 ft) deep in the ar
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<span style="font-size:8px;color:#ffffff;">ext expedition to spot the island was in 1808 by James Lindsay, captain of the Samuel Enderby & Sons' (SE&S) snow whaler Swan. Swan and another Enderby whaler, Otter, were in company when they reached the island and recorded its position, though they were unable to land.:?434–435? Lindsay could confirm that the "cape" was indeed an island.:?62? The next expedition to arrive at the island was American Benjamin Morrell and his seal hunting ship Wasp. Morrell, by his own account, found the island without difficulty (with "improbable ease", in the words of historian William Mills):?434–435? before landing and hunting 196 seals.:?62? In his subsequent lengthy description, Morrell does not mention the island's most obvious physical feature: Its permanent ice cover.:?106–107? This has caused some commentators to doubt whether he actually visited the island.:?434–435? On 10 December 1825, SE&S's George Norris, master of the sealer Sprightly, landed on the island,:?62? named it Liverpool Island and claimed it for the British Crown and George IV on 16 December.:?63? The next expedition to spot the island was Joseph Fuller and his ship Francis Allyn in 1893, but he was not able to land on the island. German Carl Chun's Valdivia Expedition arrived at the island in 1898. They were not able to land, but dredged the seabed for geological samples. They were also the first to accurately fix the island's position.:?63? At least three sealing vessels visited the island between 1822 and 1895. A voyage of exploration in 1927–1928 also took seal pelts. Norris also spotted a second island in 1825, which he named Thompson Island, which he placed 72 km (45 mi; 39 nmi) north-northeast of Liverpool Island. Thompson Island was also reported in 1893 by Fuller, but in 1898 Chun did not report seeing such an island, nor has anyone since. However, Thompson Island continued to appear on maps as late as 1943. A 1967 paper suggested that the island might have disappeared in an undetected volcanic eruption, but in 1997 it was discovered that the ocean is more than 2,400 m (7,900 ft) deep in the ar</span><br />
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