Monday, January 16, 2012

Costa concordia photos

  • Divers are hurrying as quickly as possible to rescue any possible remaining survivors from the Coasta Concordia cruise ship that ran aground off the coast of Tuscany, Italy on Saturday and keeled over.
  • (Huffington Post)
  • The BBC reports the discovery of two more bodies today brought the death toll to five for the number of people known to have died after the ship, carrying more than 4,000 people aboard, hit rocks on Friday night.
  • (Everything Alabama Blog)
  • Six bodies have been recovered so far from the wreckage of the Costa Concordia, which ran into a reef Friday night and capsized into the port area of Giglio, sparking a frantic evacuation of the 4,200 people onboard.
  • (Time)
  • The Costa Concordia had rolled so far over that a steam stack looked nearly eye-level in photos taken from the shores of a rugged Tuscan island where passengers fled after the grounding.
  • (Miami Herald)
  • So seeing the images of the shipwreck of the Costa Concordia and hearing of the fatalities was filled with frivolity and the ship decor was exuberant.
  • (Salon)
  • A RETIRED policeman who escaped the stricken liner Concordia says panicking male passengers pushed also revealed how some passengers held up the evacuation by taking photos and video footage on their mobile phones as they clambered into life rafts.
  • (This is Dorset)
  • A passenger tweets images of the shipwreck The three images below were posted on Twitter by @Puljac, who says the photos were taken after the alarm sounded on the Costa Concordia. Chaos reigned as the ship's passengers tried to evacuate the liner.
  • (France 24)
  • In its current state, the Costa Concordia resembles a dark the tail swings little to the left. If you look at the photos of the ship, you can see that the rock embedded in the side of the ships left port side as if exactly that happened.
  • (WMUR.com)
  • Rescue divers have suspended the search for missing people indefinitely after the Costa Concordia slipped 9cm from its rocky resting place - prompting fears it will soon plummet 100 metres down to the bottom of the Mediterranean.
  • (Daily Mail)

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