- Source: List of maritime disasters in the 20th century
A maritime disaster is an event which usually involves a ship or ships and can involve military action. Because of the nature of maritime travel, there is often a substantial loss of life. The term maritime disaster can refer to both commercial ships and military naval ships. A maritime disaster can result in one or more of the following simultaneously;
Loss of life
Pollution of marine environment (in case of oil spill, foul discharge of materials, sulphur emitted from fuels, etc.)
Degradation of the aquatic ecosystem
Economical loss at a grand scale
Destruction of onshore properties (accidents at harbor are not only limited to the vessels but also damage the nearest lands)
There are countless incidents reported on marine disasters.
The sinking of the British ocean liner RMS Titanic in 1912, with more than 1,500 fatalities, is probably the most famous shipwreck, but not the biggest in terms of lives lost. The wartime sinking of the German Wilhelm Gustloff in January 1945 in World War II by a Soviet Navy submarine, with an estimated loss of about 9,400 people, remains the deadliest isolated maritime disaster ever, excluding such events as the destruction of entire fleets like the 1274 and 1281 storms that are said to have devastated Kublai Khan's fleets in his invasions of Japan. The 1987 loss of the Philippine ferry Doña Paz, with an estimated 4,386 dead, is the largest peacetime loss recorded.
Peacetime
All ships, including those of the military, are vulnerable to problems from weather conditions, faulty design or human error. The disasters listed below were not related directly to military action, though some of them occurred during periods of conflict. The table listings are in decreasing order with respect to the number of casualties.
In 1972, the university Seawise University (ex-British liner RMS Queen Elizabeth) caught fire and sank, just a short distance from Kowloon.
Wartime
Disasters with great loss of life can also occur in times of armed conflict. Shown below are some of the known events with major losses.
= Russo-Japanese War
== World War I
=See List of maritime disasters in World War I
= Spanish Civil War
== World War II
=See List of maritime disasters in World War II
There are at least eight maritime disasters during WWII, each of which has a greater death toll than any other maritime disaster.
= Second Chinese Civil War
== Six-Day War
== Indo-Pakistani War of 1971
== Falklands War
== Iran-Iraq War
== Vietnam War
=In 1967, during the vietnam war, the USS Forrestal was floating on the water not too far from the Vietnamese coast. A Zuni rocket from one aircraft flew from into the fuel tank of another aircraft, starting a big fire. Within minutes, the fire became bigger and damaged other planes. More than a hundred men and women lost their lives. This was known as the 1967 USS Forrestal fire.
See also
List of maritime disasters
List of maritime disasters in the 18th century
List of maritime disasters in the 19th century
List of maritime disasters in World War I
List of maritime disasters in World War II
List of maritime disasters in the 21st century
Shipwreck
Lists of shipwrecks
List of disasters
List of accidents and disasters by death toll
List by death toll of ships sunk by submarines
List of RORO vessel accidents
References
External links
WRECKSITE Worldwide free database of + 65.000 ships wrecked with history, maritime charts and GPS positions
Titanic Facts The life and loss of the RMS Titanic, in numbers
G. Duncan. Maritime disasters of World War 2
World sea disasters timeline, 21st century
Notable peacetime passenger ship disasters
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Manusia
- List of maritime disasters in the 20th century
- List of maritime disasters in the 21st century
- List of maritime disasters in the 18th century
- List of maritime disasters in the 19th century
- List of maritime disasters
- List of maritime disasters in World War I
- List of maritime disasters in World War II
- List of last words (20th century)
- Timeline of the 20th century
- List of maritime disasters in the Philippines