Current:Home > StocksNewly released footage of a 1986 Titanic dive reveals the ship's haunting interior -Quantum Capital Pro
Newly released footage of a 1986 Titanic dive reveals the ship's haunting interior
View
Date:2025-04-17 05:03:47
It wasn't until July of 1986, nearly 75 years after the RMS Titanic's ill-fated voyage, that humans finally set eyes on the ship's sunken remains.
Now those remains are, in a way, resurfacing, thanks to the release of more than 80 minutes of uncut footage from the first filmed voyage to the wreck. The research team behind the Titanic's discovery, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute, released the video on Wednesday.
Available on YouTube, the footage contains shots of the ship never revealed to the public, including its rust-caked bow, intact railings, a chief officer's cabin and a promenade window.
At one point, the camera zeroes in on a chandelier, still hanging, swaying against the current in a haunting state of elegant decay.
The Titanic, a 46,300-ton steamship once touted as "unsinkable," disappeared beneath the waves after it struck an iceberg on its 1912 voyage from Southampton, England, to New York. Only 705 of the ship's 2,227 passengers and crew survived, according to The Smithsonian.
Efforts to locate the vessel began almost immediately after it wrecked, but were hampered by insufficient technology.
It took 73 years for a team of American and French researchers to find the vessel in 1985, some 12,500 feet below the ocean's surface. Using cutting-edge sonar imaging technology, the team followed a trail of debris to the site, roughly 350 miles southeast of Newfoundland, Canada.
With no remaining survivors of the wreckage, the ship's carcass is all scientists have left to understand the great maritime disaster.
But that carcass, too, is at risk of vanishing. It's slowly being consumed by a thriving undersea ecosystem — and by what scientists suspect is sheer human greed.
The WHOI's newly released footage shows the shipwreck in the most complete state we'll ever see. The ship's forward mast has collapsed, its poop deck has folded in on itself and its gymnasium has crumbled. The crow's nest and the captain's bathtub have completely disappeared.
Concerns of looting inspired one international treaty and scuttled plans to retrieve the Titanic's radio for an exhibit.
The WHOI said it timed the release to mark the 25th anniversary of the film Titanic, which was re-released in theaters on Valentine's Day as a testament to the ship's cultural staying power.
While the Hollywood film might be more likely to elicit emotions (read: tears), the new ocean-floor footage is still transfixing, according to Titanic director James Cameron.
"More than a century after the loss of Titanic, the human stories embodied in the great ship continue to resonate," Cameron said in a press statement. "By releasing this footage, WHOI is helping tell an important part of a story that spans generations and circles the globe."
veryGood! (2912)
Related
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Defamation lawsuit vs. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones dismissed
- Recall: Child activity center sold at Walmart pulled after 38 children reported injured
- Best states to live in, 2023. See where your state ranks for affordability, safety and more.
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Putin is expected to seek reelection in Russia, but who would run if he doesn’t?
- Ørsted pulls out of billion-dollar project to build wind turbines off New Jersey coast
- Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin dunks on Texas A&M's Jimbo Fisher as only Kiffin can
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Meta will charge for ad-free versions of Facebook, Instagram in Europe after privacy ruling
Ranking
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- As climate threats grow, poor countries still aren't getting enough money to prepare
- Supreme Court appears skeptical of allowing Trump Too Small trademark
- Bob Knight, Indiana’s combustible coaching giant, dies at age 83
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- Summer House's Lindsay Hubbard Claims Ex Carl Radke Orchestrated On-Camera Breakup for TV
- Princeton student who stormed Capitol is sentenced to 2 months behind bars
- See the Photo of Sophie Turner and Aristocrat Peregrine Pearson's Paris PDA
Recommendation
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
New Nike shoe is designed to help toddlers learn how to walk: See the Swoosh 1
ESPN's Stephen A. Smith had a chance to stand up to the NFL. Instead, he capitulated.
Alabama court says state can execute inmate with nitrogen gas
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Brazil to militarize key airports, ports and international borders in crackdown on organized crime
Escalating violence threatens Day of the Dead celebrations in Mexico’s northern Sonora state
Defamation lawsuit vs. Cowboys owner Jerry Jones dismissed