Model's Description:
Blackfriars 1 Romano-British Ship 3D Model.
Download Blackfriars 1 Romano-British Ship in various files formats such as Wavefront Object format, Autodesk FBX, DirectX 9.0, Stereo Lithography and HTML5 JSON format.
During the construction of a new riverside wall in 1962 in London, the remains of an interesting ship were found. Dating evidence from the timbers and a coin found in the mast step placed the ship as likely being built, and sunk, during the Roman period, specifically in the 2nd Century CE. However, the ship was constructed in the Celtic tradition.
The reconstruction is based primarily on the excavation report by Peter Marsden published by English Heritage, “Ships of the Port of London – First to eleventh Centuries AD”. It contained detailed drawings of the remains and reconstruction drawings. Where no evidence remained, such as for the sails and the rear of the ship, Roman period iconography and other Roman period shipwrecks from northern Europe were used as inspiration. The sail plan is based of the Torlonia relief, and the nearly intact mast of a Roman period ship found in Bruges, Belgium. The deckhouse for the cabin is based off the well preserved cabin of the De Meern 1 shipwreck in the Netherlands 3D Model is ready to download for free, this model contains 1203123 polygons.
Model's Description:
Atmospheric Diving Suit (JIM Suit) 3D Model.
Download Atmospheric Diving Suit (JIM Suit) in various files formats such as Wavefront Object format, Autodesk FBX, DirectX 9.0, Stereo Lithography and HTML5 JSON format.
See Arc/k Catalog Page - https://collections.arck-project.org/view/ARCK3D0000000185
United States Naval Undersea Museum: http://www.navalunderseamuseum.org/
JIM suit in the collection of the U.S. Naval Undersea Museum. An atmospheric diving suit (ADS) maintains surface pressure internally, protecting a diver from underwater pressure and eliminating the need for decompression. Treasure hunters developed early atmospheric diving suits to dive on shipwrecks. Commercial diving and oil drilling industries resurrected ADS in the 1960s. The JIM suit, named for test diver Jim Jarrett, was the first modern-day commercial ADS. It weighed 910 pounds and operated to 1,500 feet. The Navy began using ADS after testing the JIM suit in 1975.
Location - United States Naval Undersea Museum, Keyport, Washington.
Support The Arc/k Project: https://arck-project.org/support-the-arck-project/ - Atmospheric Diving Suit (JIM Suit) - 3D model by arck-project 3D Model is ready to download for free, this model contains 895089 polygons.