Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Ship that caused Baltimore bridge collapse has been refloated !

Ship that caused Baltimore bridge collapse has been refloated

Time:2024-05-21 17:13:20 source:Universal Update news portal

BALTIMORE (AP) — The container ship that caused the deadly collapse of Baltimore’s Francis Scott Key Bridge was refloated at high tide Monday and began slowly moving back to port, guided by several tugboats.

Removing the Dali from the wreckage marked a significant step in ongoing cleanup and recovery efforts. Nearly two months have passed since the ship lost power and crashed into one of the bridge’s supporting columns, killing six construction workers and halting most maritime traffic through Baltimore’s busy port.

The vessel appeared to start moving shortly after 6 a.m. It started and stopped a few times before slowly and steadily backing away from the collapse site, where it had been grounded since the March 26 disaster.

Pieces of the bridge’s steel trusses still protruded from its damaged bow, which remained covered in mangled concrete from the collapsed roadway.

Related information
  • Cruise worker 'murders newborn son on board ship': Shocked co
  • Baltimore bridge collapses after being struck by ship, six presumed dead
  • Few voters globally worried about climate change
  • Pope Francis calls for ceasefire in Gaza and Ukraine in Easter message
  • Bella Hadid goes braless in a thigh
  • Israel Gaza: Journalists injured in al
  • Students petition Parliament to keep free school lunches funding
  • China's real estate giant Evergrande files for bankruptcy
Recommended content
  • Georgia Republicans choose Amy Kremer, organizer of pro
  • US Treasury Secretary explains her 'magic mushroom' experience in China
  • Progress in Gaza truce talks in Cairo, Egypt's Al Qahera news says
  • China's real estate giant Evergrande files for bankruptcy
  • Britain's new bonkers EV: Callum Skye is an £80k electric buggy built in Warwickshire
  • Department of Conservation proposes 130 job cuts