Every video I watch the bow of titanic slowly come into view from the pitch black gives me chills.
@shannonlee36713 жыл бұрын
It's incredible isn't it? Imagine being down there crawling along and then she's right infront of you where you could almost touch her and the only thing separating the two is the sub. Definitely would give you a very eerie feeling.
@joysynmonds9082 Жыл бұрын
@@shannonlee3671 It's wrong to desecrate the tomb ! All for ££££.
@joysynmonds9082 Жыл бұрын
Millions of rivets. The WRONG TYPE. Ismay wouldn't wait/postpone, for the correct STEEL ones, so used iron ones.
@dandana6593 Жыл бұрын
How deep, they go on
@dudemang13536 жыл бұрын
I cannot understand how this does not have way more views. I have watched this probably a dozen times or more. It is- and always has been a dream of mine to visit here. One dream I sadly won’t ever be able to afford.
@cynthiadawnloreth5535 жыл бұрын
Matthew Roos unfortunately, money and positions of elite, did then, still does, and will always rule the world! so, along w/ you, yes, another incomplete and unfinished dream will be forever and ever ♾ lost
@Raul_Gajadhar5 жыл бұрын
That was very touching towards the end. I really respect the thinking of the Russians. Titanic is a grave site, respect the dead. Even thought her age is showing, I am sure she and the souls that went down with her is happy to be remembered. "No dumping of refuse. Leave nothing but footprints. Take nothing but memories."
@missemeraldalfeche10055 жыл бұрын
Very lucky people to see Titanic deep in the ocean ❤️
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
Well I saw Titanic at the theater in the mall and I don't feel lucky or nothing!
@PenelopeRoberts92125 жыл бұрын
I'd rather have seen it as a floating hotel in N. Ireland.
@uncommonsence1535 жыл бұрын
Very lucky to not have been born and had to be on that ship imo
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
Very brave people. I would never go down there.
@liviam14974 жыл бұрын
I would be to afraid to go down there...
@chrisramadhin72865 жыл бұрын
My heart ❤️ is all for this tragedy to all the unfortunate soul lost on this cursed journey I’ve been in love with titanic since I was 11 I’m fascinated by the legend of titanic
@hardy2k115 жыл бұрын
When a ship is named the "Ship of Dreams" It will never be forgotten
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
I think maybe that dream turned into a nightmare for most of them!
@beverleylumb80484 жыл бұрын
The name and the fact it sank on its maiden voyage and the fact so many people died due to not having enough lifeboats for cosmetic reasons
@janjohnsonamarillas33865 жыл бұрын
This was well done with respect thank you , and I'm glad the lady found her grand dad, bless her heart made me cry to !
@joansavage18575 жыл бұрын
That was just wonderful. May they rest in peace.
@ed4all335 жыл бұрын
2020. Starting the year by paying tribute to all those lost souls. RIP. Heres hoping the malaysian aircraft that mysteriously disappeared is found and tributes to those lost souls can be paid at last .
@adamahmad12625 жыл бұрын
Fond memories to those who perished.Love from Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia.10/01/2020.
@Doctor6995 жыл бұрын
I'm not too hopeful about the Malaysian aircraft which vanished. Probably would have disintegrated on impact with the water making finding remains so much harder. Then again, if i were 100 years back i'd probably have said the same thing about the Titanic, it's too deep in Davy Jones locker and we'll never find it. It may take decades, but we'll find it, remembering and honoring those who perished.
@mogadon75 жыл бұрын
R. I. P. - to everyone who keeps saying R. I. P.
@j.whiteoak64084 жыл бұрын
I don't expect that Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 will ever be found. Whether it went down in an attempted controlled landing by a conscious pilot or whether it crashed from a 30,000+ altitude ... either way no recognizably "large pieces" could possibly have remained intact for sonar equipment to detect. The seas in that part of the Indian Ocean were known to have been between 3m and 5m that evening. They would have ripped an aircraft attempting to land into tiny little pieces. A crash from great height would have resulted in the same thing as hitting concrete. (Look at the evidence after the Florida swamp plane crash .. nothing much larger than a postage stamp remained). Anything without the ability to float would have sank to the greatest ocean depths, too small to return any significant sonar signals to search ships - and the experts are still arguing about the right location of where it went down! Some of these world experts say that the search areas should have been another 50km wider than the searches that were actually conducted. And the only pieces that could stay afloat did .. and the ocean currents sent them thousands of kms away to where the only pieces of MH370 have ever been found: in the Reunion Islands. The barnacle-encrusted wing section with the ragged trailing edge flapperon belonging to MH370 was found there and, according to several experts, indicates that the pilot was trying to land the jet on the water because they were in a fully extended position, and the damage done to the trailing edge is indicative of catastrophic contact with the rough ocean waves. This indicates to some of the panel of experts that a landing was attempted but the aircraft was ripped apart. Other experts on the panel disagree with this hypothesis. But I don't believe that any pieces large enough to be detected miles beneath some of the world's deepest and wildest oceans exist after crashing into such rough seas. The pilot intended for it to never be found and I believe that he has succeeded. NOTE: My views and opinions are formed based on the research as presented and discussed by the panel of experts on whose advice the search for MH370 rests, and who are interviewed by journalists on the Australian 60 Minutes program, all of which are available for free view on KZbin. Interestingly, only 4 Australians were aboard Malaysian Airlines flight MH370, yet the Australian government has spent many millions of dollars in trying to find remnants and any other evidence of the aircraft's final flight. This seems to raise more questions than there are answers for, but although the pilot had turned off all navigational tracking to the aircraft, he was certainly unaware of the 'pings' that each of the aircraft's engines sent out at regular intervals and which were picked up by a satellite which identified the aircraft as being MH370 and the area in which the plane finally crashed. Although the search is akin to the proverbial 'needle in the haystack', those data pickups by the satellite certainly have made the haystack all that much smaller ... and yet no trace of MH370 has ever been identified - all except for the flotsam and jetsam which have washed up on the Reunion Islands, just East of Africa's East Coast. And that includes the large piece of MH370's wing that was recovered there. Certain other items such as personal luggage have been known to have also washed ashore on Reunion's beaches - but these were soon after burned as rubbish because those who are responsible for cleaning up the beaches were completely unaware of what it was they had discovered. And now it's unlikely that any further pieces will wash up after such a long period of time. That opportunity to identify any more of the passengers' personal belongings is now lost to time, as those ocean currents have long since passed by the only known landfall where any traces of MH370 have ever been discovered. The rest is surely at the bottom of one of the world's deepest oceans in pieces too small to be detectable by current methods. If you are interested in further information about MH370, I highly recommend that you look for the Australian 60 Minutes programs on KZbin about it.
@ed4all334 жыл бұрын
J. Whiteoak sounds so sad 😞
@sp3c1alsteph3n85 жыл бұрын
CHILLING, DAUNTING AND HAUNTING all at the same time!
@dwightphillips4396 жыл бұрын
Great information that I didn’t know. My grandma was young when this tragedy took place. She talked with me about her great sadness for all people that lost their lives.
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
You didn't know your grandma was young? What did you think she was born old or something?
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
My great uncle remembered when it happened even though he was just a kid at the time. He said "they were going too fast and hit an iceberg."
@laurastitanic5 жыл бұрын
For anyone interested - the plaque they brought back up is now framed and situated in Belfast City Hall. I visited there in 2017 & whilst watching this today, I wondered if this was one and the same, it is.
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
What is the plaque they brought up? I didn't quite catch that.
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
@@1940limited It's a brass plaque that they took with them down to the ship and brought back up again, before bringing it back home to Belfast. They wanted the plaque to get tarnished by the trip down to the Titanic, as well as the time spent around her and the time it took to go back up again. They didn't take anything from her
@1940limited4 жыл бұрын
@@Arterexius Interesting.
@lisamorrison214 Жыл бұрын
@@Arterexiusdoesn’t make sense
@Arterexius Жыл бұрын
@@lisamorrison214 what part doesn't make sense? That they removed something they had placed themselves or that they continued to honor the lives lost with an emotionally based plaque?
@songohan46683 жыл бұрын
I've been studying Titanic for more than twenty years. It never stops amazing me. Edit: May the souls of all those who died with the ship rest in peace. 🙏
@ritaalber35052 жыл бұрын
What's there about it that needs 20 years of studying? LOL
@foldelops6 жыл бұрын
LOVELY Documentary!!! CRYIN at end.. so VERY SAD!!!!!
@patrickrichmond98966 жыл бұрын
This is a great video that shows respect to the 1500 souls that lost their lives on that terrible night. Sadly as in just about all Titanic videos, the ship is being eaten away by natural resources on the bottom of the ocean.
@elizabethwhiteoak52917 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed this documentary .. it was respectful in every way possible, and I even shed a tear with the granddaughter of the fireman from Belfast who's grandfather was buried in Nova Scotia. No one should be taking anything from the Titanic ..Firstly, it is the gravesite and final resting place of some 1350 souls - remember that of the 1500+ who died, only approx. 150 of the bodies that were picked up by the Mackay-Bennett et al were actually taken back to be buried in Nova Scotia. Although they actually picked up approx 322 bodies from the water - give or take a few, they only had coffins for less than half of that number and they only brought back those who were not too decomposed for burial - remember also that by the time the recovery boats reached the site where the great unsinkable ship had sunk, they had already been in the water for a week! So those that were too decomposed were sewn into canvas, weighted with lead bars, and prayer services were held as they were finally committed to their deep, watery graves almost right over Titanic's resting place - and after around two and a half hours they would have finally reached the bottom and at 3,800 metres below the surface they, too, rejoined those fellow passengers who went down with their ship. Secondly, Titanic Inc. owns all rights to the wreck of Titanic ... they certainly wouldn't be happy to find out if American tourists were stealing artifacts from the wreck site!! Everything about Titanic should always command respect for the many lives lost - actually, Titanic is now 15 square miles of cemetery on the ocean floor. And it's alarming to hear regular divers to the wreck commenting on her very poor state of health. But she's in such a bad way that she really doesn't have long before she totally collapses under the incredible pressure of 4kms of ocean above her, and her very own unique bacteria eating away at her. And once she collapsed her total rustification will be very swift, indeed !! One day soon - in perhaps 50 years - she will physically be nothing more than a bright orange smear of rust stain on the floor of the Atlantic Ocean. But those personal artifacts will always remain, along with the ship's things - like her massive propellers which can never rust because they're made of brass, and those ceramic items like plates from the kitchens, etc. But, of course, Titanic's memory and that of her fate will never, ever be forgotten, even though many of the real names of those died on her maiden voyage will never now be known - because Titanic's story is the stuff of legend. Even more than 100 years since she went down interest in her is more popular than ever - thanks to movies about her and the expeditions to her wreck each year (which also brings wealthy tourists and research dollars) we can watch her closely whilst respecting that it's a 15-acre grave site for 1350 people who died violently, tragically. Wherever you see the pair of boots and shoes on the ocean floor .. that was once a living, breathing, laughing and crying human being! They're still on the ocean floor exactly where they came to rest almost one hundred and six years ago .. they've survived because the tannins and uric acids that were used to tan the leathers are so unpalatable to the very same creatures that willing ate away their human occupants that they are still laying right there bearing witness as silent grave-markers - and will continue to do so for many years to come. But they won't last forever .......
@bettygoodbody6 жыл бұрын
Elizabeth Whiteoak the entire Titanic eveñt touches my heart
@elizabethwhiteoak52916 жыл бұрын
bettygoodbody Oh, I know just how you feel. And me too .. no details regarding the tragedy are too big or too small to be meaningful to someone. And I feel very strongly that taking anything from the wreck is tantamount to grave robbery!
@Prof_Tickles926 жыл бұрын
It’s not a graveyard unless there’s bodies. The stuff belongs in a museum, or to the relatives of family members. I will agree that it is wrong to take things off the ship to hock it
@normathomas82766 жыл бұрын
Beautifully put thankyou for your words x
@Abimin1005 жыл бұрын
@@habs8715 no, or every place where an accident or tragedy happens is considered a graveyard now?, the atlantic was the graveyard of the vast majority of the people, not the ship, and the ship is a cultural heritage and should NOT be letting to rot and dissapear in order to preserve all these people's legacy alive, the titanic tragedy played a huge role in waking up people about the dangers of the ocean and not taking the security measures seriously. As sadly nothing can be done for the ship's remains, the objects in it should be recovered and given back to the families if they want them or put them in museums to be remembered for the future generations
@Joe..3.8.0.9_6 жыл бұрын
Excellent video gentlemen ! She belongs to the sea ... Ex Navy.......
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
Nuh uh..... Some people over in England say it belongs to them!
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
I agree, the sea took her as its own and she shall always remain there, just like every other ship that goes down
@shaneshanks97025 жыл бұрын
R🙏P to all the people that past away that horrible night 😢❤️✊
@negativeindustrial5 жыл бұрын
Shane Shanks “Passed”
@shaneshanks97025 жыл бұрын
@@negativeindustrial 🤔😂 sorry dad 😂😂
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
@@shaneshanks9702 Sorry *[comma]* Dad *[period]*
@shaneshanks97025 жыл бұрын
@@robotbjorn4952 😂🤣😂
@habs87156 жыл бұрын
I want to go see Titanic and have always dreamed of seeing Titanic
@redrayne1736 жыл бұрын
Me to, i would love it
@kaneki-ken966 жыл бұрын
me too
@RSTI1916 жыл бұрын
$65K will get you there
@tonyyeahmirandashestillbea39885 жыл бұрын
Me too
@paulanthony52745 жыл бұрын
I'm gonna go get the papers get the papers
@MegaJacko45 жыл бұрын
"You need to trust the technology," Kind of a ballsy thing to say when your diving to the wreck of the "safest" ship in the world...
@Oakleaf7005 жыл бұрын
I wonder how people use the loo down there?...ten hours, and what if someone has a panic attack... perhaps the claustrophobes won't pay to go... Heck, I had a panic attack in the Channel Tunnel...and could barely hang on til we got to France to loose the bowels of hell{ panicky gut action brought on by claustrophobia}
@MrDukey855 жыл бұрын
😂😂
@thebeanboy75475 жыл бұрын
🤣😂🤣
@poulwinther5 жыл бұрын
As if you don't do it every single day? :-)
@Blox1175 жыл бұрын
its 100 years old you clown. technology changes
@krm91195 жыл бұрын
RIP Titanic
@mogadon75 жыл бұрын
Correct - the Titanic did RIP; it ripped in two.
@clayin_it_4 жыл бұрын
The ship will always be in my heart
@papanoel3999 Жыл бұрын
Who's watching this now. 2023,after,well you know.
@Del-Canada5 жыл бұрын
There needs to be more on KZbin and around the web in general about the MV Wilhelm Gustloff. It sank in 1945 with an estimated loss of life being 9400. It's not very well know and was the worst disaster at sea in the history or marine disasters.
@RoseSharon77775 жыл бұрын
Del wow, never heard of it! I’ll certainly research it. Thanks for posting.
@enochpowel45805 жыл бұрын
it was an enemy of england and got what it deserved.
@Del-Canada5 жыл бұрын
@@enochpowel4580 It was packed with civilians fleeing Nazi Germany. In any case I wasn't making a judgement one way or the other. I was just saying it's a sinking worth talking about.
@enochpowel45805 жыл бұрын
@@Del-Canada look into that ships history during ww2
@Del-Canada4 жыл бұрын
@@johnnychaos152 Do you know the name of the movie? Sounds interesting.
@ghostcityshelton93785 жыл бұрын
May they all REST IN PEACE.
@brandihilton84853 жыл бұрын
I love seeing recent videos about the Titanic- It will for ever be a legend. I want to see the exhibit that is here in Las Vegas. 💔
@clairefunnell84814 жыл бұрын
Fascinating. Love the Titanic. She was such a beauty. Ships of today are so ugly. It's October 2020. Wonder What she looks like now. Thank you for the tour and Long live Titanic. She will never be forgotten. Touching with the lady and her grandpa. Really sweet.
@tomlardner27083 жыл бұрын
She rests noble in the ocean depths. Titanic will never be forgotten in people's minds and hearts even when she in gone. Rip rms titanic queen of the ocean.
@ChairmanPaulieD6 жыл бұрын
I actually did shed a tear when the granddaughter of that fireman was at his grave site saying her last goodbye to her grandfather 😪😢😭
@tygervoods83585 жыл бұрын
Really sad especially since he was a fireman. These poor guys were always in the dirtiest place on the ship to power her with all the coal and heat in that environment. These guys were locked in during the sinking and were hopeless being stuck in with those boilers and were probably one of the first ones to die as the water would have flooded the rooms and drowned everyone inside all while everyone couple floors up were rushing to the stern of the ship.
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
Well he had plenty of water to put a fire out with, he just lucky there wasn't a fire because I think he was the only fireman there!
@trollhunter64215 жыл бұрын
Moves me to tears every time too
@Tiffany.19705 жыл бұрын
so sad to see this once beautiful ship in this state one cud say its down to arrogance n not heading iceberg warnings in 1912 so with that it's history n fate of the titanic God bless the souls in heaven xx
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
I can't believe how dumb people have gotten.
@danielreyne61475 жыл бұрын
Russians, when it is under extreme conditions, have the best technology
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
The Russians are intelligent, hard working and very talented people.
@pickamove4 жыл бұрын
The submarine they are using was built in Finland, Tampere. Not Russian but built for Russians.
@pickamove4 жыл бұрын
Check Rauma-Repola who designed built those two submarines.
@Lilliz915 жыл бұрын
Damn I never thought how the pressure would crush some of the things. It was really interesting to see.
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
It's amazing that little sea urchin walking along down there and that it can live in such a hostile environment.
@sepnyte94225 жыл бұрын
I found it rude that the divers were bummed they couldn't 'salvage' anything. Yes, it's been over 100 years but it's still a mass grave..
@Dannyjoemustanggt5 жыл бұрын
It's all greed anymore things that are in that ship would be worth billions
@xenophagia5 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it pisses me off too.
@frankvandendool8825 жыл бұрын
Are all 4 of you really this stupid?!
@ericscaillet22325 жыл бұрын
@@frankvandendool882 do any of the footages show any remains ,would there be any remains after all this time,what do you think.
@PassionJo7775 жыл бұрын
Ohhh I can DEF understand!! But if everyone could grab something. They'd be nothing left to explore 😢
@Jarvisc125 жыл бұрын
As a American i am very sad to hear that my fellow countrymen wanted to take objects from that grave site. I bet they would be pissed off if a 100 years from now people took objects from their grave site or those who they love. It's a grave site where men , women and children lost their lives and should always be treated as such.
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
Make ashtrays from the skulls amd sell them at Walmart, pussy!
@shaunakelliher68814 жыл бұрын
I am watching this at 12:30 am April 14th 2020 in 24 hour's it will be on it's way to sinking,taking many soul's with her. May they forever rest in peace.
@arundhutidutta26254 жыл бұрын
It is on her way to sink....the ship collided with the iceberg at 11:40 pm on 14th April,1912
7 жыл бұрын
Watching those people, reminds me of how sick I was staying in the middle of the ocean for 3 days and 2 nights.. I suffered a very horrible sea sick..
@basheer42776 жыл бұрын
Queen of Borneo Island Young Lady 🤗
@LimerickWarrior16 жыл бұрын
Queen of Borneo Island Young Lady lucky u didn't get a slap of an iceberg....
@felixcat93185 жыл бұрын
Very nice video with an excellent insight into the remarkable design, technology, metallurgy, engineering, telecommunications and construction skills that go into building vessels capable of taking three people more than two miles to the seabed over a ten hour period, and return them to the surface, all in relative comfort, and with the highest degree of safety imaginable! Today safety is designed and regulated in, whereas in the time of Titanic, neither the designer, owner, builder or regulator cared about the safety of the passengers and crew, and so it sailed in the absolute certainty that more than half the people on board would drown or freeze to death in the event that the ship sank! The third class passengers made up the bulk of those lost.
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
The original chief architect of Titanic abandoned the project when she was almost done, out of concern over the number of lifeboats and that H&W's owner Lord Pirrie, wouldn't add more lifeboats. So he simply quit as he couldn't stand as the chief architect of something that could cost over a thousand lives (which it did). The original chief architect was Alexander Carlisle, but Thomas Andrews took his job after he quit. Another notable architect of the Titanic, was Edward Wilding, who contributed with a lot of the mathematical calculations for the Olympic Class ships. Harland and Wolfe's ships were generally a lot safer than most other ships of the day (and a heck of a lot sturdier). It was consequently Lord Pirrie who made the fatal decision to not include enough lifeboats on Titanic, although this was immediately corrected after her sinking, so both Olympic and Britannic had enough lifeboats. Both remaining sisters also got a full double hull, as well as increased height of their bulkheads. Just to add in extra safety. Source for Architects: titanicfacts.net/who-designed-the-titanic/
@ddaymen118 жыл бұрын
17:28- that opening is where they entered the Mast to climb up the ladder to the Crow's Nest which is where they saw the iceberg. that's where they spotted it, not from the doorway
@crocodile13137 жыл бұрын
That doorway used to have remains of the crow's nest wrapped around it. However, over time, the actual platform has rusted away. You can see that in some of the videos and pictures taken in the late 1980's.
@ddaymen117 жыл бұрын
Ah, right
@countalucard42267 жыл бұрын
Dwight DAYMEN if they spotted the berg 30 seconds sooner or later it wouldn't have sunk. IMO
@toyreviews32146 жыл бұрын
vic vega and how would they see it? They would just see a patch of missing stars however first officer murdoc or how ever it is spelled would not see it like that and spotted it first titanic honor and glory has explained this.
@poulwinther5 жыл бұрын
@@countalucard4226 It's claimed that it could have withstood a head-on collision but at full speed it doesn't seem convincing. It would definitely have killed a lot of people as well.
@autumnrryan35346 жыл бұрын
I know it's probably a great possibility that if the ship hadn't of sank none of us would know what Titanic was, but I still wish it didn't sink. It's just so sad what those people went through. Most of the third class passengers didn't survive because they were trapped in their cabins below. RIP Titanic and those who perished with her. 😢😢
@cliff96856 жыл бұрын
Autumn R Ryan that’s a very interesting thing to contemplate. None of its passengers would be known or researched the way they have been. Encyclopedia Titanica has researched every passenger and crew member in its website with detailed biographies. All of these people would have disappeared into history. Yet due to the sinking people are reading about their lives over a hundred years ago. It’s fascinating reading about what the passengers had been up to previous to boarding, and why they were traveling and what they’re plans were after the voyage. It’s deeply sad to read about the survivors and how their lives were changed forever from losing a loved one.
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
@@cliff9685 We probably wouldn't have known the lives of the passengers, but the ships would have gone down in history as they beat Lusitania and Mauritania with ease when it came to luxury and sheer size
@thepalettewhispererasmr12275 жыл бұрын
Omg imagine if that little exploration capsule knocks into a pillar😲
@fabianwylie87075 жыл бұрын
I always see people saying it’s not right to take anything away from the this amazing ship!, But can’t you see the amazing things that are being put in World museums and that brings to life all those who lost there lives. Keeping there stores alive . Truly I feel this is right . We don’t take away and it’s all eaten by the sea , what’s the sense in that!.
@sawchiefs295 жыл бұрын
Fabian Wylie As Robert Ballard has said before, “You don’t go to Gettysburg with a shovel. You don’t take belt buckles off the Arizona.” I get what you’re saying, ok, I do. Those who take things from that ship and either give it to the families or preserve it for memory, that’s fine. But there are those who use if for publicity, money making and/or auctions. Plus, leave their trash around the ship. That crap needs to stop!
@fabianwylie87075 жыл бұрын
Seth , with everything there always some that are not thoughtful. But I love the fact these people and titanic will never die., I was born on the 14th April , kind of ironic ans have been fascinated by Titanic for a very young age. Preserving history is very important, especially when it comes to Titanic 👍
@markwoods15045 жыл бұрын
Titanic is a grave site and should have the respect as we have for other ships that have sunk eg Lousitania #RIPTitanicVictims
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
Nuh uh because if it was then why ain't someone go down there and put up a tombstone then?
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
I say we harvest the metal and make some $1000 key chains.
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
@@robotbjorn4952 Why don't we harvest the tombstones of graveyards and build cottages while we're at it? Besides, the metal of the Titanic is worthless. It would gradually dissolve as it got raised, due to it merely being a bunch of rust held together by sheer pressure by now. Sure, there's a small bit of integrity left, but that integrity is merely temporarily preserved by the amount of rust. The only metal at the Titanic that could be reused, is her propellers (good luck raising them) and certain parts of the bridge, as well as the plaques laid at her bridge and some of the decorative metal parts throughout the ship. In other words, all the brass, copper and bronze is salvageable... If you can raise it successfully. I say good luck with the propellers because each propeller weighs in at 38 tonnes. We don't have the technology to raise anything of that weight from at depth of 3.8 km down, neither can we cut it. So it's practically impossible. Same goes with 90% of the remaining brass, copper and bronze, as they are attached to the ship and thus needs to be cut away (or wait till the entire thing has become a pile of hydroxide dust and then dig through it). In other words, the only metal you can salvage by this point and actually make something out of, is the memorial plaques. Removing them to make $1000 key chains gives you one hell of an explanation problem for the 1500 families who lost family members in the tragedy. In other words, the court trials would ruin you financially for the same amount of time it takes Titanic to rust entirely away, counted from the moment she sank.
@robotbjorn49524 жыл бұрын
@@Arterexius _Of course_ you wouldn't bring up all 38 tonnes of propeller at once. That's ridiculous. I can't even begin to imagine the costs involved with such an endeavour. The obvious approach would be to shave of bits little by little. Maybe make a limited edition Jack and Rose heart necklace from the bronze or something like that. I could imagine those going for $100K easily, way more valuable than rusty keychains. And I sincerely doubt there'd be 1500 _seperate_ famalies lining up sue me. You're forgetting that many of the casualties came from within the same household, with some being wiped out entirely, and let's face it, the 3rd class passangers likely didn't have too many branches on the ol' family tree, if you know what I mean..
@criticalhard4 жыл бұрын
If this fails in any way you're dead, idk if I would take the risk but imagine seeing this amazing ship with your own eyes o m g . Definitely a risk worth taking. I hope more expeditions are made to the ship.
@adriankatsikides33905 жыл бұрын
stunning resolution, but neither you nor any of you should be there - leave it in peace
@susanmorano4054 жыл бұрын
So agree!! Watching the rich guy and his son was especially gross ...
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
@pricktroooollll There's nothing left down there that can be restored now, except anything made of bronze, brass, copper, glass or ceramics. All the wood and textiles are long gone and besides the materials mentioned above, there's only iron left. Iron which is in such a bad state that the vast majority of it is just rust held together by pressure and saltwater.
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
Go see it should be fine. No touching, just visit her and show that we're still here and we still care. And we will care even after she's no longer there.
@staceynicole89786 жыл бұрын
It is interesting that Titanic is the reason the Empire State Building exists today. If John Jacob Astor hadn't died, then his son wouldn't have sold the land as to where it stands today. Crazy how everything seems to fit together.
@paulanthony52745 жыл бұрын
Both my grandparents n my mother's side met in the RAF in the 1940s,they would never have met if not for that so I suppose if it wasn't for that swine Adolf Hitler I wouldn't be here,but anything happens,lot's of reasons,why things happen and can change alsorts like you said it all fits together some how
@dianebrady67845 жыл бұрын
If JJ Astor had lived.....we would not have the federal reserve.!!!!! He was opposed to it....as was Benjamin Guggenheim and Isadore Strauss. JP Morgan wanted the federal reserve. Morgan candles his titanic ticket whilst the others did not. Morgan survived....scammed the victims by having immigrants settle for 25$... no matter what they lost on board the titanic....or how injured or traumatized...and created the federal reserve.
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
@@dianebrady6784 This.
@gokulgopan4397 Жыл бұрын
@@dianebrady6784there are literally no evidences to show JJ Astor or Guggenheim were against federal reserve. Not even a single statement privately or publicly documented. As for Isidor Straus, he was an open supporter of federal reserve (New York Times October 16 and 18, 1911). As for Morgan, he wasn't even going to be in the ship. Cancelling in last minute is just another made up thing from conspiracy theorists. He was already going to be in Venice by April 23, it was publicized. If he made titanic voyage, he wouldn't have returned back in time, considering transatlantic voyage takes 5 days. By mid April, he was in France to overlook his art exports, now in Metropolitan museum of art, before France passed a law to prevent Americans from exporting art treasures of France.
@barbiesworld8925 жыл бұрын
RIP Titanic & The Lost Souls. I’m Watching This January 18th 2020!
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
So sad about all of the people, both young and old, that were lost that night!
@2snowgirl5205 жыл бұрын
That first group who went down were disgusting as they said they were disappointed not to get “souvenirs “. It’s a gravesite, you bastards! Money can’t buy you class.
@marissaramirez44715 жыл бұрын
Pancake 52 that's right people really died there
@kamrynreynolds81685 жыл бұрын
You have to take into consideration that it is literally these people’s jobs to salvage things from wrecks all around the world. Of course they are going to want to bring things up. It’s not always about the money it’s about the history and sharing what they have found. But I also understand that 1000s of people lost their lives and it is more than a ship full of jewels. It’s history and a gravesite. It’s strange how often those two words coincide.
@whattheheckamidoinghere43055 жыл бұрын
Now I understand why Ghosts of the Titanic keep coming to some of the Titanic museums because people keep taking their stuff. -_-
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
I don't know what's down thee to take as a souvenir anyway unless you could get inside the ship somehow. I believed in leaving the ship entirely intact as Ballard found it, but we knew that would never happen.
@ericscaillet22325 жыл бұрын
@@kamrynreynolds8168 besides you wouldn't want to know what goes on during all non recorded dives...
@EnglishPatriot1016 жыл бұрын
The Irish Diver?? Is a barrel of laughs isn’t he !!
@seannewhouse19435 жыл бұрын
Paul Cochrane they just can't get by without a yukkity yuk!!!!
@silvereagle20615 жыл бұрын
I think if I were to dive down to Titanic, I would have spent the first hour just crying.
@nexxusty4 жыл бұрын
Well said my friend, I would be doing the same thing as you brother. You sound like someone that I would like to visit the ship with myself.
@silvereagle20614 жыл бұрын
@@nexxusty I wish I could afford the trip down there. It's pretty expensive I hear.
@thepalettewhispererasmr12275 жыл бұрын
6:07 Dude got a scopolamine patch so he doesn't puke...
@rahullohar71255 жыл бұрын
I really very enjoy this documentary I love all the this team, I really appreciate
@ronaldpellet8545 жыл бұрын
I can’t imagine a worse death to anyone who could not swim. Not that you would have lived. But you may not have had the extreme fear
@mrbigbigtoe5 жыл бұрын
Let’s be honest, if the hatch door is going to come open, it is best that it happens at the surface and not nearly 13,000 feet below😱
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
Honestly, if the hatch door becomes open at 13,000 feet, they wouldn't even have time to realize what just happened. They'd just get crushed instantaneously. The pressure is absolutely insane. A single cubic meter of water weighs 1 ton. Idk how to calculate with imperial units, so here's how with metrics: 1 cubic meter of water (1x1x1 meter) weighs 1 ton Titanic lies about 3.8 kilometers down, which is 3,800 meters. This means that there are at least 3800 tonnes of water pressing down on every square meter (1x1 meter) of the Titanic. According to Google, an average fire truck weighs 40 tons. This pressure is then equal to the weight of at least 95 fire trucks stacked on top of one another. Or in the case of the hatchet opening at the site of Titanic, it would be 95 fire trucks stacked on top of one another vs. 3 adult human beings. No chance of surviving that. I've over explained this to make it easier to grasp the sheer pressure for anyone seeing this in the future
@SideshowBob444 жыл бұрын
The amount of pressure on that hatch door... you could never open it at that depth even if it was unlocked.
@walkerbelle10 жыл бұрын
In the past two days I have watched roughly a dozen video documentaries on the sinking of the Titanic & I have heard the number of lost souls is 1486 to 1522? Do any of these so-called producers/directors know just how many people died due to the actual sinking? How can there be so many different numbers lost more than 100 years after the fact???
@emozamudio33408 жыл бұрын
hoy en 2016. podrían sacar al titánic
@briarswt8 жыл бұрын
The problem is due to several things. First, the reports were horribly confused in the days after the sinking. There reports that there were none lost or that all were lost. Other reports indicated a few numbers. Secondly, not all survivors wanted to come forward - they wanted to leave everything behind. I remember hearing one family only learned of their matriarch's connection to the disaster shortly before her death. So the numbers are always going to be a bit off. But it's within the 1500 range.
@judithniles93248 жыл бұрын
Texas Hi-Railer, I'am afraid we'll really know how many died on that tragic night so long ago. it must of been utter hell for these people who had no-way to a life boat knowing that their going to die. I wonder what would of happened if they had of hit the iceberg head on? I know there would of been damage but would it of been so badly that it would of sunk anyways? what do you think???
@wyatt24477 жыл бұрын
As I understand it the official count is 1512 lives . This does not include members of the crew as they were not counted among the passangers at the time . Just as Wallace Hartly and members of Titanics band were not counted as crewmen but independent contractors by White Star Line . And the workers who were still on board to do finish work in some areas were not included in tally of survivors or those who perished .
@fay-amieaspen60466 жыл бұрын
There's supposed to be a fairly recently published book that is alleged to list all the passengers lost and saved on The Titanic, as accurately as possible, especially given false names, people jumping ship, people changing their minds at the last minute, people who disembarked at various ports etc. I find it very far fetched and arrogant for anyone to actually say that they have a complete list of people with very little information to go on. I've heard anything from 1512-1572 were lost.
@danielreyne61475 жыл бұрын
The russians beleive the birds are the souls of the dead passengers. and respect this belief it is nice
@feleciaramsey73426 жыл бұрын
Amazing part of history God bless the victims
@zajournals4 жыл бұрын
Nice. I also liked the last James Cameron documentary where they got cameras down into the bottom of the ship buried in the seabed... all remarkably well preserved compared to the rest of it. Even woodwork has survived in those lower levels.
@DailyInspirations19786 жыл бұрын
30mins wasn't enough to watch the wilderness of this massive ship. It is so ere to go deep into the ocean knowing the fact that is the exact location 100 years ago where this gigantic ship sank.
@ericscaillet22325 жыл бұрын
And undisturbed by looters.
@ryanwaidalowski92215 жыл бұрын
I agree with leaving Titanic and it’s belongings but someday people and relatives of those who lost their life’s should be able to appreciate what is inside her. Not to sell but in a museum.
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
There's nothing of relevance left inside her. All the wood and fabrics are long gone. It's just metal, glass and ceramics by now. And in the end, the only things left down there will be a pile of hydroxide dust, as well as anything made from glass, ceramics, brass, bronze and copper. Including her propellers, although they won't ever be lifted back to the surface as each of them weighs 38 tonnes. There are at least 3800 tonnes of pressure on every square meter down there. No way they'd be getting those propellers up again.
@tonydeleo36425 жыл бұрын
What was the thing that looked something like a clown face outside the port as they descended?
@Misslynndance4 жыл бұрын
13:53 Jellyfish
@davidellis51355 жыл бұрын
Soon there will be nothing left, the rusticles, will turn it into a hydroxide pile on the seabed.
@thomasdaniels68245 жыл бұрын
Yes, that's true, but how about the 60 feet of bow that planted into the mud. To this day, it's said that it's in near perfect condition. As morbid as this sounds, I can't wait until it collapses and shows what we haven't been able to see yet
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
Soon.. It's gonna be a few decades more. Yes, she has begun collapsing on herself, but all this talk about the Titanic being completely gone at the end of this new decade is like comparing her to a fishing trawler. She will collapse more, yes. But Harland & Wolfe made some god damn solid ships back in the day. It's going to take quite a lot more time before she's a pile of hydroxide
@zajournals4 жыл бұрын
They've been able to get a camera down inside to rooms below the sea bed and they are in much better condition. Absolutely amazing. Even woodwork still there. Look for a James Cameron documentary here on KZbin.
@Ramon_924 жыл бұрын
verry interesting docu would be amazing to dive to titanic once .
@FutureRailProductions6 жыл бұрын
I can imagine myself falling asleep on the dive down. Just because of the sheer boredom. I would probably be speechless when I would see the massive rusting wreck of the Titanic in all her glory. Probably my best buddy would be like "Are we there yet?" I would love to dive her but probably by the time I can afford to go she'll be nothing but a faint rust stain on the ocean floor. It's sad.
@STHFGDBY4 жыл бұрын
I read somewhere that Titanic would be completely gone in 50 years. There will obviously be scattered debris left but even that will eventually be eaten away.
@tomdotson60535 жыл бұрын
Fascinating but I wouldn't go down there
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
Neither would I.
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
@ Tom Dotson... That's the exact same thing my girlfriend says to me on occasion!
@nexxusty4 жыл бұрын
I would literally trade my life to go see that in person. Funny how people differ, huh?
@AaronH91114 жыл бұрын
@@nexxusty I'm the same as I would love to see her too in person :)
@brandihilton84853 жыл бұрын
Wow!! I didn't know that a family member of one of the victims is or was alive!!! Amazing!!!
@Deseriemichelle2 жыл бұрын
Still something that I think about and all the lives lost. 😢
@Elvismontroy5 жыл бұрын
I'm here from 2030, going back to the future now.
@johnsepulveda4434 жыл бұрын
it's something to hear a guy want to pull something up from a grave site like people haven't already taken too much off this ship
@toddkurzbard4 жыл бұрын
I would like to point out one error - the KELDYSH does NOT go out to the TITANIC wreck every year. If she is chartered to go out there, then she will go. Also, it should be noted that, as of now, the TITANIC's wheelhouse\bridge has now had a NUMBER of 'memorial' plaques placed there (6 or more), and it's almost progressed to the level of "littering" the spot. I can respect the thought behind it, but sometimes too much is just too much. As one famous author said, "The TITANIC is in danger of being loved to death".
@CrazyPCKid5 жыл бұрын
13:38 ... he didn`t seem to give much of a f** for the guts spilled...
@alanablythe5 жыл бұрын
Interestings thank You Knows anyone more about Jack Philips , Lightoller and James Moody? Thank you greetings Alana
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
I'm sure you could Google their names and get information. Charles Lightoller went on to serve on other ships and died in 1952. Jack Philips did not survive the sinking. Neither did James Moody. I do not know if their bodies were recovered.
@alanablythe5 жыл бұрын
@@1940limited Hi. Thank You!!! Sad .. greetings Alana
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
@@alanablythe Why are You spacing Your comment like This? -Robot Bjorn
@philipbrazill21554 жыл бұрын
Absolutely incredible. I would love to be able to go down to the bottom of the Ocean and see R.M.S Titanic. It would be mind blowing but a little nerve racking knowing if anything happened at that depth you'd most likely be part of the mass grave😟
@tiaogol15756 жыл бұрын
👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏parabens a brilhante equipe 😨❤titanic o navio dos sonhos eu sou fanatico por misterios de titanic
@johnsepulveda4434 жыл бұрын
something a lot of people also don't know is that this wasn't the only ship captain smith had a accident in he also crashed and sunk another ship years before he got command of the titanic
@canadianplinker90115 жыл бұрын
Would residents of Newfoundland and Nova Scotia be able to see the lights of the titanic sinking at that time are would it have been too far?
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
Too far, I would think. She was still days out from Nova Scotia.
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
You're talking about 400 miles.
@musiimenta1234567894 жыл бұрын
Am watching this 15th April 2020. Exactly 108 year anniversary of it's sinking. So absurd all this could have been avoided 😭
@brianbommarito33764 жыл бұрын
I’m a little upset that William McQuillan’s Family were not informed until this documentary was made that his body was recovered and buried in Halifax. He had a wife and kids who should’ve been informed of that at least. It would’ve given them at least some bittersweet closure in knowing that, although he was gone, that his remains had been given a decent burial and was no longer floating in the ocean along with some 1200 other victims whose bodies were never recovered, 1500 victims total.
@DiamondGirl3335 жыл бұрын
How do you pronounce kopa6nb-SlerehAa- Tntahnk? And how rich do you have to be to say, hey son, want to take a day trip to see Titanic?
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
I don't know about the first, but the answer to your second question is: *very*
@elizabethhenshaw10526 жыл бұрын
That skull floating in the Atlantic ocean reminds me that Titanic is a graveside, and should remain that way!
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
Ikr. And when I saw those two skeleton hands still clutching tightly to the steering wheel, it just about floored me!
@xcrystalx6255 жыл бұрын
I must be tired, I watched the whole video very closely and I didn’t see either one of those things. Timestamps please? Thank you😊
@stlbusker30255 жыл бұрын
@@xcrystalx625 he was being sarcastic and morbidly teasing Crystal
@xcrystalx6255 жыл бұрын
StL Busker LOL thank you, even though I knew it wasn’t scientifically possible when I saw it I just had to go looking of course 😀😀😀
@ratedrsuperstar11485 жыл бұрын
Crystal L. ....did you notice that the pool is still filled with water too...? Crazy Ikr....!
@chadhickey95275 жыл бұрын
It’s rusting away. Well that’s what naturally occurs. No way to stop it. Just let it be.
@menacegtr7 жыл бұрын
Wasn't that very sad right near the end. They took Marjorie Wilson all the way to see her grandad, that was a very poignant moment, very very sad but i suppose for Marjorie a happy moment too
@fay-amieaspen60466 жыл бұрын
menacegtr. Aw for sure, I was very moved and had a cry over that moment when she was talking to her GrandDa at his graveside. That was powerful enough as it gets. Really good of those who made the programme to have taken her all the way there. A beautiful gesture on their part. Sure ti's a great shame that so many of those graves have no name on them, but the most famous one now does, that of the formerly unknown child, thanks to forensics and DNA testing, he now has a name, identity and family that knows of him. That had me in tears too. Greatly moved too that the Harland and Wollf plaque now lies on the bridge, quite rightly too.
@markpierrepont85764 жыл бұрын
I always think that I was once on the Titanic in another life it bothers me that much
@manofsteel87666 жыл бұрын
i hope they bring titanic up.. because every years it will be decrease and disappear...
@staceynicole89786 жыл бұрын
Sadly they can't but I hope they bring up more pieces. I got to see the piece brought up and it is pretty incredible. I just hope they will start to bring more.
@tur74d566 жыл бұрын
It is possible to raise it if enough money was thrown at it and everyone was happy about it , even the guys who found the ship said this
@mindyschocolate5 жыл бұрын
Darren T the ship is too far gone. Should they try to raise it now, even if it were possible, the forward section would fall apart and look just like the aft section.
@mickeymouze55 жыл бұрын
Darren T this is just grave Robbery people died in the ship of course, it’s better to leave it too it’s final resting place
@propheticcow70295 жыл бұрын
Youd have to lift the entire area around it aswell
@justasarcasshole20384 жыл бұрын
11:05 "Now we EAT". YEAH they sure do take care of them birds. She put em in a box.. 🤔
@Arterexius4 жыл бұрын
I believe your "she" is a "he". The box is ventilated and they're most likely placed there to protect them, so no one accidentally steps on them and kills them. Your eyes aren't exactly on the deck when you're swaying from side to side. You'd be more busy making sure you stay on the ship and doesn't get swept off of it.
@justasarcasshole20384 жыл бұрын
@@Arterexius And you saying that to say what? Or your just infatuated with MY COMMENT!!!??
@SenorZorrozzz3 жыл бұрын
People who regard this as a graveyard are in error. There aren’t any dead bodies there. All that’s left is the ruins of the ship. Bringing up pieces of it to display in museums it’s not sacrilegious. It is a good thing that the people I remembered. It is also good to continually learn from this disaster.
@Hadam10Rose4 жыл бұрын
Yep, could tell this was an old special before looking at the upload date. The Captains Bath is gone now. The roof has collapsed on top of it.
@criticalhard4 жыл бұрын
That glass it was made of is very strong i highly doubt the bathtub is completely lost.
@Hadam10Rose4 жыл бұрын
@@criticalhard the roof has completely collapsed ontop of it. It would have broke under that
@shaunbrown85 Жыл бұрын
Titanic wasn't almost safe from icebergs. That'd why the captain believed she was. 1912 turned out to be an unusual year for icebergs. The next one was 1962. The bergs went further south before melting those years.
@davy14585 жыл бұрын
I would love to be able to raise the titanic to the surface and thoroughly explore every nook and cranny and try to analyze its contents and positions of said contents in an attempt to try to piece together what's sorts of things people where doing shortly after the order to abandon ship was given...i know there are no human remains left on the titanic but id also like to try and find a way to determine where bodies had once been trapped inside the ship and how many of them died in their cabin room....and then I'd loot the contents of each room...once I was finished I'd drop her back down to the bottom and divide the loot between museums and black market collectors willing to pay high prices.
@thespian3025 жыл бұрын
davy1458 the fuck?
@davy14585 жыл бұрын
I was joking about the black market remark...everything else I meant 100 percent...if that means I'm a sick bastard than I'm guess I'm a sick bastard....oh well....at least I'm not a serial killer or a pedofile.
@thespian3025 жыл бұрын
davy1458 your bar.... is abysmally low
@davy14585 жыл бұрын
@@thespian302 it doesn't matter someday you and I will be dead and we will just be another tombstone that living people will walk past with out giving a single thought to what we did in our lives...just like you and I do when we walk past tombstones...our hopes, dreams, hard work, accomplishments and failures won't matter a flying crap to them or anyone else. So don't take life to serious because someday nobody will have a clue that we ever existed ....nor will they give a shit. Just be genuine and kind to others and don't take this life to serious because it's to short and brief to be waste your time being a prick...if it is important to you than buy a tombstone that says "here lies a prick"
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
@@davy1458 Wise words.
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
If the Titanic did not sink on it's maiden voyage as it did, it probably would have led a normal life of 20-30 years then been scrapped. Or it might he been torpedoed in WWI or WWII if it lasted that long. Under the tragic circumstances of the ship's early demise, we are left with something tangible to visit and remember the ship by. It's sister ship, the Britannic, lies in the bottom of the Mediterranean Sea, a victim of WWI. Thus we have two 4-stackers still extant.
@staceynicole89786 жыл бұрын
How do people go to the bathroom during that 10 hour trip?
@paulanthony52746 жыл бұрын
They have two bottles different colours,one for the ladies and one for the gents and they just look away while the individual does their business lol
@michaelhearne19606 жыл бұрын
It would be a good idea not to eat baked beans or Brussels sprouts before you spend that amount of time in a confined space
@rainpop30366 жыл бұрын
Tablets
@christa9985 Жыл бұрын
It's so sad enough lifeboats this would have never happened that should be sued and everything
@andyznuff5 жыл бұрын
A legitimate question, what if you got to take a dump at 4 hours in?
@uncommonsence1535 жыл бұрын
You gotta go you gotta go
@sofiaamariaa1235 жыл бұрын
I was watching Tony Robinson's dive with James Cameron to Titanic the other day, and I think he mentioned that they all had to take some kind of pill to sort of constipate you before they went down, if I remember right
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
That would be my problem. Mainly, I'd have to go pee. That's another reason I wouldn't go down there.
@uncommonsence1535 жыл бұрын
@@1940limited that's the reason you wouldn't wanna go a few miles under the sea? Bc you might have to piss. Not the fact that it one screw breaks your head would explode. 🤔🤔.
@1940limited5 жыл бұрын
@@uncommonsence153 Both reasons. Having to pee and possibly getting imploded. I'm content to stay on the surface and look at video.
@riggstwenty24 жыл бұрын
I think I may be the only one who thinks that everything should be salvaged.
@debwalls94054 жыл бұрын
Fabulous images :)
@justmissjamey6 жыл бұрын
At 20:53 it looks like a book still on the shelf
@thomasdaniels68245 жыл бұрын
I think you're right. Good eye!!!
@criticalhard4 жыл бұрын
It does omg
@jakeshaw68274 жыл бұрын
It's extremely hard to picture how huge the titanic was. The pictures of it don't really do it justice, it would be cool if someone built and recreated a exact replica of it.
@idi0tba1ley174 жыл бұрын
who else celebrated titanics 108th anneversairy on april 12th?
@teamricexx4 жыл бұрын
April 14-15 is the anniversary where the frick did you get 12 from
@beauferret54145 жыл бұрын
The captain's famous bathtub has apparently now disappeared from the wreck. Another reminder that the Titanic is deteriorating.
@julianneh.wathne4 жыл бұрын
Beau Ferret how do you know?
@lisamorrison214 Жыл бұрын
@@julianneh.wathneit was there when Dr Ballard discovered the wreck. Too many divers down there ripping things off the ship for money. BTW the tub looked absolutely brand new.
@MarcosSilva-et9ww5 жыл бұрын
2019?
@CrazyPCKid5 жыл бұрын
not for long
@ed4all335 жыл бұрын
2020 actually 😃
@robotbjorn49525 жыл бұрын
1972 and I have so many questions.
@leannatallmeister81437 жыл бұрын
13 year old kid with backwards hat drinking coke casually has NO idea how lucky he is to be on this dive.......ugh
@johnlennox40347 жыл бұрын
Leanna Tallmeister exactly what I thought when I saw that scene.
@kahnbrown70747 жыл бұрын
I agree I give anything to do just one dive
@PlzDeleteMe-fc2hl7 жыл бұрын
Same!
@fay-amieaspen60466 жыл бұрын
Would have loved to know what the lad thought about it, I mean come on, only 13, experiencing a once in a lifetime opportunity like that and just nonchalantly drinking full fat Coke? Shameful! Why wasn't he interviewed? Money talks! Only the privileged few who can financially afford it get to go to the wreck, unless you're involved in the scientific research field or get invited. Seems like father and son were playing a rich man's game!
@TinaharrisTinaharris6 жыл бұрын
Fay Goodwin agreed I happen to be the so many great niece of the Titanic's captain and I would give anything to dive to it just to pay my respects to him and all those unfortunate souls.
@Matuatay Жыл бұрын
I'm all for visiting the wreck to learn and retrieve ship-related artifacts of unique historical value that will educate future generations long after the ship and all of us here now are gone. I do not, however, support this idea that everyone who visits the wreck needs to leave what I like to call an "I was here!" plaque, claiming it's somehow "in memory of" or "out of respect for", etc. Littering the bridge and other areas of the ship with fancy signs is not okay. Once was enough, and at least Ballard had the taste to leave his plaque in a relatively inconspicuous spot on the stern rather than leaving it on the bridge as a bragging point all future visitors would be sure to see. I wish someone would go down there and remove each and every plaque from the bridge and either send them back to the organizations and individuals that left them there, or place them on the seabed somewhere near the wreck. The urns of survivors who later died and requested to be placed on the ship with their lost loved ones should stay, but the clutter (placques) need to go. Sorry for the long rant, but every time I see the bridge area and see what a junkyard it has become, it really irks me to no end.