From keel to deck - part 01 of building the HMS TERROR from Occre

In 1845, under the command of Sir John A. Franklin, the ships Terror and Erebus set off on an expedition to navigate the famous Northwest Passage. They were the first ships to be fitted out with auxiliary steam engines and were also reinforced with iron plating, fore and aft, to increase their resistance to pack ice. They were stocked with sufficient supplies for 3 years at sea. The last sighting of the two ships was off Greenland was as they entered Baffin Bay, gateway to the frozen Arctic labyrinth. With the collaboration of an Inuit hunter from the Arctic hamlet of Gjoa Haven, on 26th September 2016 the wreck of . Terror, 168 years after her disappearance, was finally discovered. The Terror was in excellent condition. Images have been obtained of her deck and interior, showing perfectly preserved objects and parts of the ship that remained intact. With this “from keel to deck“ I started a series of assembling videos of a wooden ship model of the . Terror from Occre in scale 1/75 eventually placed in a diorama. The Terror will be shown stuck in the pack ice. Many thanks to Erick Miotke for his fantastic music theme which covers the dramatic ice situation. Happy Halloween... Colours used: alcald II Additional rods and tubes: Albion Alloys
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