Camera Maker | Canon | Camera Model | Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III |
Aperture | f/2.8 | Exposure Value | 0 EV |
Exposure Program | Manual | Exposure Time | 1/3200 sec |
Flash | No Flash | Focal Length | 55 mm |
ISO | 100 | Metering Mode | Pattern |
Date/Time | 2011:10:20 11:37:45 | Resolution Unit | Inch |
X Resolution | 240 dots per ResolutionUnit | Y Resolution | 240 dots per ResolutionUnit |
Compression | Jpeg Compression | Exposure Mode | 1 |
Subject Distance | 2.65 | Keywords | Glomar Explorer historic marker covert CIA PA attraction destination display education information landmark marker operation sign tourist Philadelphia attractive Cold War Dry Dock Company educating historical marker Historical Site Historical Sites info Jennifer Project Philadelphia County Place of Interest Places of Interest road side Road sign Roadside signage Soviet Sun Shipbuilding surgery tour tourism tourist attraction Tourist Destination Tourist Destinations travel Travel Destination Travel Destinations Pennsylvania appealing healthcare no people sightseeing text United States attract history nobody sightsee word daytime destinations displays historic markers Jason O. Watson / historical-markers.org landmarks markers operations signs tourists United States of America appeal color image educate historic outdoor vertical coverts day historical markers road sides surgeries tourist attractions tours colour image historical outside day time day-time US words color images daylight outdoors USA verticals colour images natural light outsides U.S. U.S.A. historic site sign with text |
Caption | GLOMAR EXPLORER In a covert CIA plan named the Jennifer Project, this ship was built at Sun Shipbuilding and Dry Dock Company, Chester, in the early 1970s and played a key role in US Cold War espionage. Its mission was to obtain intelligence by recovering a sunken Soviet submarine, three miles deep in the Pacific Ocean. Portions of the sub were raised by the ship's huge claw in the summer of 1974; six Soviet submariners were recovered and given a burial at sea. Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 2006 |