My grandfather told me that he saw the Titanic.. and that from the beginning he warned all the people that the ship would sink, but nobody listened to him. He was a brave man. He did not give up. He warned them again and again on several occasions.... until they kicked him out of the cinema.
I remember that there was an assumption around that time through the stories I heard, that the "Titanic would not sink!", It was a new vessel and droves of people who were wealthy went on this vessel. The arrogance was staggering, and I don't understand why people actually shunned others because there was talk of it not being safe. Truly a tragedy! 😮
The saying back then was that “God himself couldn’t sink her,” because the Titanic was the largest ship 🚢 ever built at the time of its launch in 1912. But yes, this was only 11 years after the end of the Victorian era and there was still an attitude of arrogance and superiority that prevailed among the upper crust.
Crazy how there's no video on the Durham Report, but then again if the BBC lied about it like they lied about The Twitter Files in their Newsnight clip on it (the only BBC clip on UA-cam about it), it's better perhaps that they're not lying again.
My mothers, father was in charge of installing the lighting in the Titanic. I'm 79 now but when I was 16 I went up to see my grandfather who lived with us and I asked him what the Titanic was like. The look of horror mixed with anguish that came over his face told me never to ask again. He was in his 70's at the time. My grandmother told my mom that when he heard that the ship had sunk, he cried. The only time that he cried in the 50 years they were married. Mom was 3-1/2 months old at the time. They lived in Birmingham. I wish I could have talked to him about what he saw but he didn't want to relive the memories.
I never heard why. He was tool and die maker and the apprentice master with a 135 apprentices studying under him, employed by the lighting manufacturer. He would have been from one end of the ship to the other and may have seen flaws that would have doomed the ship and recognized them. The huge loss of life on a ship that he had spent years working on both in the manufacturing and installation of the lighting was probably the reason. As I said it haunted him for the rest of his life.
People foget that the Titanic was only discovered in 1985, 38 years ago. Even after all this time have we really explored the Titanic at its entirety? No. Explorers in the past have only barely touched the surface, this 3D imagine will really bring so much more to life. I'm excited to see what new discoveries are made. Those who worked on this project and are finding new things every day are truly lucky how amazing to be part of this exploration.
not like we dont have the blueprints of the ship, oh wait we do, its a shipwreck there's nothing special about it. Its only famous because of its tragedy that's it. figuring out how it sunk does nothing but satisfied curiosity. its not even a scientific discovery lmao
There’s something so eerie about the shoes or the bed frames or even the chairs that these people once used. What an incredible testimony to science and history. I edited to add that I have absolutely no inkling as to why people are implying I should have watched the video, I did. Nothing in my comment contradicts said video in any way whatsoever.
It's even more eerie considering the reason why the shoes are in pairs. They are all that's left of where a body once came to rest at the bottom of the wreck.
@@HROM1908I don't mean to speak out of turn, but I believe they are referring to how clearly defined the details are. For example, where you could see the number on the propeller.
@@HROM1908 Since the main scanning method was SfM photogrammetry (they indirectly say that), I admire how clear the texture is. Yes there are ways to enhance the texture (probably lots of AI postprocessing) but I also imagine there must have been some very advanced lifting trickery involved.
After all the documentaries and movies, the sinking of the Titanic has become almost a mythic event, so it felt a little strange so see the wreck in such detail, and realise again that the actual remains are still down there where they fell. Familiar, and yet not. May those who perished rest in peace.
@@theatomsinmearebillionsofyears there won't be any human remains there now it's more like a monument. Graveyards are moved all the time for development....
What’s amazing is how accurate Ken Marschall’s paintings of the Titanic wreck were, many of which done decades before we had complete pictures like this
I just got the Titanic: An Illustrated History book, with his paintings, and I was speechless. The painting of the ship across the two pages at the very beginning is absolutely breathtaking.
@@El_Jefe_S3 The mystery, the story, the accounts, the theory’s, the sheer amount of size of her, the beauty of the ship unmatched, still a icon in today standards and the list keeps going that’s how legendary she is.
It's almost impossible to imagine what the ship would have looked like sitting on the ocean floor when it first sank; We see rust, rot, etc, decades later but the ship was brand new when it sank and therefore she would have obviously been her original colors of red, black and white when she hit the sea floor, and her interior still incredibly lavish. It's just really hard to imagine such a beautiful thing sitting there with no rust and far less collapsed and tattered than what we see now. Having watched plenty of models and digital renderings of the sinking, I've seen what the ship would have looked like, yeah, but it's still extremely difficult to picture it in real life just sitting there rust and rot-free, long before the "rusticles" started to devour the ship and all the other things that have taken place in the years since, causing her to look the way she does over a century later.
Someday, someone will do a gloss up of it and present the picture you had in mind. I think it would be interesting to see. So many things are possible with photography now.
It didn’t look that much different when it sank, minus the rust. The stern section imploded on the way down. It hit the sea floor in many pieces, and probably didn’t look that much different over 100 years ago as it does today.
The recent Titan disaster brought me here. Their five souls unfortunately joined the ones of Titanic on the ocean floor. Both absolutely tragic. May they all rest in peace.
Erm, miss me with the Titan grief. Those billionaires had no business going down there and attaching themselves to the wreck site forever. They desecrated a mass grave site with their greed and hubris.
@@innocentnemesis3519the ceo? Sure he had what was coming to him but the other 4 didn’t deserve this, one was literally a teenager and what it was his fault he died?
My grandfather saw the Titanic, he said he had a deep awful feeling that it was going to sink. He tried to warn everyone, yelling at the crowd.. they kicked him out of the movie theater.
Was visiting our brother who is retired Navy in Halifax Canada about 15 yrs ago , he took us to all the gravesite where some of the Titanic victims are buried so we could pay our respects. It was very humbling to say the least. May they all rest in peace.
I've always had this strange fascination about the Titanic, almost an attachment. To know that there is now a digital scan allows so much more evidence based conclusions to be made, and even more preservation of the wreck. Truly astonishing.
I would suggest you take a look at Titanic Honor and Glory, it's a full recreation of the titanic in the works by a niche development team using gaming software to bring it to reality. They are integrating VR into it, to allow you to literally walk the ship yourself.
@@Zulisian I love Honor and Glory! I’ve followed their work since they began the game. My favourite work of theirs thus far is the Real-time Sinking of the HMHS Britannic. I played Patroness of the Mediterranean in VR and it was such a remarkable experience
I wonder if she was torpedoed in order to murder somebody powerful on board. Would be interesting the analyse that twisted wreck to look for any signs of an explosion. We need to look under the sand, too.
One can truly never cease to be amazed by the haunting images of the Titanic wreckage. In many ways it’s like going back through time to 1912, but seeing it through today’s lens. Could you imagine seeing this tragedy unfold as a passenger aboard the ship? Watching from a lifeboat (if you were lucky enough) to see the unsinkable Titanic disappear into the depths of the ocean whilst being amongst so many passengers screaming for their lives? It’s absolutely chilling.
it’s way worse than you think. the power on the ship went out very quickly. it was just about pitch black. the only sensory input for those still alive were screams, the sound of metal tearing and bending, and freezing pain. many survivors said they never forgot the sound of the ship splitting in half.
"Lost Voices From the Titanic" is a great book for anyone interested in this subject. It traces all the mistakes that led up to the final mistake. It was not just the iceberg. It began with the ship's design, building materials, the use of cheaper coal (requiring higher burning temperatures affecting integrity), and lack of binoculars. Plus more. It also tells the stories of all who lost their lives. Edit: I've become aware that there are several books on this subject with similar titles. The one I'm recommending is "Lost Voices from the Titanic" by Nick Barratt.
after 111 years it’s truly unbelievable to see the ruined old wreck of a ship which had an unfinished story and never got to complete her maiden voyage. knowing there used to be thousands of souls there at some point in time who were so hopeful and excited to start a new life/experience something new. hearing about this fatal disaster still gives me chills, I can’t imagine the day when the whole wreck will be disintegrated and how there will be almost no remains of it. rest in peace to everyone who perished 🕊️
Mindblowing to see the whole wreck in such detail. The story of this ship will probably never truly end. My family has a direct connection to her through third class passenger and survivor Mr. Charles Edward Dahl, and my fascination for the Titanic will very likely always stay with me because of that fact.
My grandfather saw the Titanic, he said he had a deep awful feeling that it was going to sink. He tried to warn everyone, yelling at the crowd.. they kicked him out of the movie theater.
Incredible. I remember watching the grainy video footage of the wreck back in the 1980s. Trying to visualise what it looked like, 35 years ago. Amazing how much the technology has come on since then.
There's a documentary from the late 90s which tells you the whole story. You can even see it sink. The boat they use in the documentary - is much better than this scan. It was sad to see real people's story
I had a black and White copy of the first National Geographic magazine that had shown off everything, including scans of the top and sides of the ship. I need to buy an original copy of the magazine plus the 2012 version.
@@snookerstones It was in real color. Actually looked like the real ship. And they made it sink at the end. And you saw all the people fall off. This new scan is good for academics but the texture quality is worse.
My 9 year old granddaughter is fascinated by the story of the Titanic. I took her to one of the cemeteries here in Halifax, where there are graves of some of the victims, whose bodies were brought here, after the sinking.
The Halifax Maritime Museum has a piece of 1st Class Lounge Paneling from Titanic recovered when ships were sent out to recover bodies. They also had a deck chair and other interior pieces including a newel post facade from the grand staircase.
@@wesleypeters4112 we went there too, I took pictures of my granddaughter in front of some of the Titanic displays….along with a lovely model of the Franconia, which I sailed on, to England, when I was 2 years old!
I was about 9yrs old when the Titanic movie came out so a lot of us had the same interests in the Titanic at her age. It's a great way to start teaching a child HOW to learn history. Often, kids view things from today's perspective and take things for granted. It was a wonderful introduction fir me to learn how to understand the sociology of the time period so I could view the event from their perspective. Truly profound.
Always love to know what happened to this beautiful magnificent ship and the people who sadly lost their lives on it. 111 years but the Titanic still fascinates me
Hollywood drama... The sank was programmed. The boat wasn' t Titanic it was Olympic damaged on the first trip in the 1911. White Star did kill more than 1.500 people just to eliminate anti Fed exponent who were on the boat. Scialups were removed for this reason. Any iceberg on the orizont big fellow... Wake up
It seems the world is obsessed with this tragic ship, and the legend just keeps on growing ! Fascinating detailed scan of the once mighty Leviathon of the sea !
What annoys me is how people who think they know it all, mainly these young people in their 20s, are now saying the ship didn't break in half. There are eyewitness accounts about it breaking and these people still think they know more about what happened.
I'm glad they scanned it! Now anyone can closely take a look at it without endangering themselfes by diving down there in a sub or something similar. This will probably save lives and money.
I was just about to make the same comment. It reminds me of the piles of shoes at Auschwitz, there's definitely something very poignant about them that hit you more than anything else.
Titanic was built less than a mile from my home in Belfast shipyard... I often walk down to the dry dock where she was built, the giant chains that held her are still there...
I live in Northern Ireland, about an hour away from the shipyard and it is always an intrigue no matter how many times you visit the Quarter or the museum.
@@stevenanderson7461 Belfast might _have_ built her, but I live less than a mile from where the anchor was made (Netherton) and I am literate. Don’t skip school kids!
Beautiful. Placing the scan of Titanic in a stadium is a master stroke; it gives a great sense of proportion. The talks give the video depth, and it is exciting to see the passion of Atlantic Productions’ CEO.
Yeah, a great sense of proportion, to show you how tiny this ship actually is. It was only 883 feet long. Our biggest cruise ship today is 1,188 Feet long. The fact that the Titanic can fit in a stadium shouldn't put you in awe of its size, it should make you realize that people vastly overhype the size of this ship
@@DaysofKnight Correct, it is overhyped. And it seems to me that the proud boast 'this ship is unsinkable' has been proved wrong. People should be more humble about their technical accomplishments.
@@DaysofKnight They only transposed the bow end of the ship. I was twice as long in reality. Yes, she was much smaller than the largest ships today but at that time she was unbelievably huge.
"We don't even know if she hit on the starboard side, she could have grounded" The ship had a double bottom specifically to prevent damage from grounding allowing water in, as grounding was a really common way for ships to sink (White Star Line had actually lost a ship that grounded off of Halifax not long before Titanic's design process started). And if you look at the wreck, you can actually see some of the iceberg damage as a line on the starboard side of the hull (near the bottom of the ship, under the bridge) which is where boiler room's 5 and 6 were. (Oddly, that line is missing from this model, despite being really clearly visible on photographs of the wreck). Also even if there were grounding damage, this model doesn't actually capture the bottom of the ship so you'd not be able to tell anything about that anyway.
@@hyperdog4565 If the guy is an expert then I'd argue that the quote was taken massively out of context when presented here. There's just simply no way this model would tell us whether the ship had grounding damage or not, and there's visible damage on the starboard side of the wreck that corresponds to where survivors saw water flooding in. I don't see how an expert could argue otherwise. They could say that perhaps the ship did take grounding damage as an example of an unknown but again - this is just a model made of pictures. They didn't actually do any scans that would show them what the condition of the bottom of the hull is. There's no way to use these scans to determine grounding damage.
@@TheDogGoesWoof69 isn't that just racist? Sure, back when racism was a norm, there were movies with an all white cast, but those days are long gone now. Isn't making all black movies defeating the purpose of the BLM equality movement? You're a racist.
I wonder if Titanic was torpedoed and these guys were murdered for investigating. They had a super high tech sub and I'm not sure why everybody passes it off as a toy. They were billionaires for christ sake. If you had a billion, would you risk your life if you weren't absolutely 100% positive you would survive?
God, it’s amazing how well the bow has held up over the years, but it’s also depressing to see the condition of the stern, and how badly it’s falling apart.
Yes, the stern suffered an implosion on the way down. Trapped air also means people alive. Having said that, horrific fact is that there were most likely people still alive in the stern, in complete darkness that were conscious and aware of the stern section of the ship being underwater for a brief time (15-20 seconds maybe) before it imploded. Death was instant but that must have felt like an eternity…
Among other things, how the parts impacted the sea floor has an effect....I remember reading that the bow section descended like a male leaf while the stern just plunged. The bow landed...the stern crashed.
The way all the articles spilled out of the ship , it looks as though the stern might have been affected by the breaking up also . If my memory is correct the Titanic broke in two when the bow slammed in to the ocean floor .
@@tommurphree5630 No....she broke in half just under the surface...as the bow went under the stern came up out of the water and put stresses on the hull it was never designed for, resulting in the hull splitting in 2. Had she broken apart on impact, there would not be an 800 meter gap between the halves, no debris field between them, and the halves wouldn't be facing differing directions. Survivors reported that the stern was vertical at the surface after the bow went under....that's when a lot of stuff fell out of the stern...then the keel holding the 2 halves together broke and they descended separately.
@sam signorelli Hard to say . That was a long way to the bottom , and yet the stern and front part of the ship are lined up with each other on the ocean floor . I would think if the bow went down first , the shape of it would be different than the stern and the different shapes would effect the path direction as they plowed through the water . It might be possible there was a rebound effect when the bow hit first , causing the stern to separate itself and drift slightly backward before it settled .
Seeing the Titanic sitting there in the middle of the stadium is incredible. Just imagine being able to visit the Titanic at a museum site set up using AR headsets technology using the high res scan footage and walking or being lifted amongst the wreckage. Respectfully that would be the most amazing and humbling experience. The ultimate Titanic museum experience.
@@_blank-_ The Olympic was different from the Titanic though, they looked the same from the outside but inside the layouts and interiors differed significantly. James Cameron has actually said there were things they didn't know about Titanic which they based off of pictures from Olympic for the movie but after further exploration on the wreck they discovered the Titanic was set up differently which never would have been known otherwise as there are very few photos of Titanic's interior.
Have you watched the remastered recreation? I watched it earlier, there were no people on it just a recreation of how the ship sank. Although the one I watched had music and background hubbub until it became screaming Even though it was just a computer-generated video it was terrifying to watch. It's just shocking how so few people realised what was happening until it was far too late 😢
@@suzyqualcast6269 I think USS Yorktown is 5 km (3 miles) deep at Midway. Last I heard, the old lady was doing fine. I have a terrific book about Yorktown (explored by Ballard), I need to dig it up. EDIT Sorry for the double reply, my Internet sucks.
I'm fascinated on the history of the ship. Before it set out to sea. I find the tragedy has been overly sensationalized. Someday I'd like to see someone. Do a heartfelt documentary. On all the victims in remembrance. They deserve to be remembered by the lives they lived. Not by the tragedy that followed. That was no fault of their own. There were alot of heroes on that ship. That give up their lives. To save others. That's what we should remember about the Titanic.😥🚢
I would love to see someone make a VR experience using the model. I think being able to walk on the ocean floor looking up at the reck would be one of the most magnificent and heartbreaking experiences. You could have in VR.
Titanic hg is making a titanic game with extremely accurate graphics, pretty sure they’ve already released an VR-edition for the beta3, which includes 50% of the ship already!
Crazy to see a difference in this version of the wreck since 2012. Especially the stern section, the poopdeck has really caved in at such an angle like the bow compared to the 2012 photos as well as the original 1986 photos
Im a third generation American, but my great-great-grandparents had bought tickets on the Titanic so the family could immigrate to the States on the maiden voyage. Quite luckily, the White Star Line had overbooked the ship, and my ancestors were denied lodging on the ship. Largest bullet dodge for my family, hands down, considering they were considered third class passengers, the largest majority of which went down with the ship.
The biggest & luckiest bullet dodge for real. I can’t imagine how the people who were denied to board/came late so was left behind who were unaware felt when they heard the news
@Michelle Don’t know, actually, but I can hazard a guess that it was the Irish family line. The Titanic had left from Southampton, and had two ports of call that in Cherbourg, France, and Cobh, Ireland. My family is mostly from Europe, but none of my great-grandparents are French and the only family line that lived close to the port of call of Cherbourg was the Belgian line that was smuggled out of Belgium during WWI, so it rules out the Cherbourg stop. The only two other stops it could have been were the preliminary English port of Southampton, where the English or Welsh lines would have likely left, or the Irish line from the Irish port of call of Cobh. Given my family was third class up until my mother finally got us into somewhat of a middle class lifestyle, any family from mainland Europe likely would not have had the resources to take a boat across the English Channel and then take a ship across the Atlantic.
@@digitaal_boog in 1981 my grandmother died and they dug up the family plot to bury her there. They exposed the remains of my grandfather whose wool uniform, leather boots, leather accoutrements still survived. Macabre and fascinating at the same time to see the man that I’ve never met.
We can see what they would have seen from the safety of an armchair, for a whole lot less money. The only difference being, we can't say we experienced it at depth.
Why do we remember the Titanic in such a major way? I believe it is an eternal reminder to us. How dangerous a feeling of invincibility is. How quickly our hubris can turn to disaster.
That one section image of her gave me a cold shiver. For one moment in time someone was finally able to raise the magnificent RMS TITANIC. I've always called her MY TITANIC.....
Amazing video the deceased wld never believe how famous they've all become but, showing respect is the most important thing here. "may all rest in peace."
Amazing work done by the scientists and tech used to make this copy. It makes me so sad that the titanic went down. However, the shipwreck helped shape new rules for ships regarding so many different things like lifeboats.
Glad to see the old lady is holding up. All those shoes on the ocean floor were once a person, literally a human body that decomposed down to its bones, leaving sturdy leather behind. The Titanic resting place is hallowed ground. Respect.
This in the stadium is not a representation of the entirety of the ship. This is just the bow and center section. The stern lies astern of this part facing the opposite direction since she broke in half either on the surface or on her way down.
I saw a video a year or so ago, showing the Titanic's dive to the ocean bottom that was based on the current information of where items where found. With so much more information I would like to see this model of the changes in Titanic as she sank recreated.
I’ve just been to the Harland and Wolff shipyard and the Titanic Experience in Belfast. I went to her pump house and dry dock. You really got a feel for exactly how big she is. I’m very excited for this documentary.
I don’t think the journalist realizes that the places where you see shoes are the final resting places of those who died. Their bodies have withered away and all that remains are their shoes still in the place where their remains once were. James Cameron spoke on this in an interview.
@ko7577 No one fucked in the boiler room and certainly no one fucked on the "gravesite". Honestly what are you talking about? You seem quite confused. If you are referring to the scene in the car that was in the forward hold of the ship, not the boiler room. Do you think no one had sex on the Titanic? Do you honestly think it unrealistic to show such behavior? Also you do understand the movie was filmed on a sound stage and not at the wreck site correct? James Cameron went to extreme lengths to be as historically accurate as possible, yes some characters and relationships are fictionalized for the sake of story telling but certainly there were romances on board. I don't think it's at all offensive to portray things that could have actually happened. In fact the only part of the movie which was true fiction was the part where the officer pulls out a gun and shoots someone, Cameron has expressed deep regret over this scene as at the time he was thinking more of the story telling and not of the impact that scene may have on the descendents of that man. He has apologized for that scene and admitted that it was wrong for him to put that in the film.
@@marmac4483 It's not just a graveyard. It's a historical landmark that'll be gone one day and should be documented as much as possible for future generations.
@@SirDankleberry I agree with you but the woke brigade might not they might have something to say they are trying to destroy history and fiction books for children I could give you instances but I won't I am sure you know l still think it should be left alone it's a graveyard and if some other people in years to come when they can get down they will rob it I can't believe there is shoes still there after all this time I am sure there are a lot of valuables dow
Tell that to the Russian pirates who go down there to steal stuff and the rich socialites who get married on the wreck's deck in a submersible because they want to reenact Cameron's stupid movie.
*A lot of people know that Titanic broke into two pieces but what a lot of people do not know is that it actually broke into four pieces. Yup, you read that right! Let me explain: When Titanic broke between the third funnel and fourth funnel, in between those funnels was the kitchen areas and the pantries and plates, cups, etc., where everything was stored for cooking and cleaning etc. so when you look on the ocean floor, you'll see thousands of plates and cups and wine bottles all screwed along the ocean floor! Now, Titanic's Bow and Titanic's Stern are in two separate pieces but the other two pieces are scattered near the boils but in smaller and smaller pieces because where the break up was, it was so much stress, it literally tore apart those structures*
The Wilhelm Gustloff torpedoed by a Russian submarine in the Baltic was a third of the size of Titanic but carrying three times the passengers. 9000 plus passengers died ,but it does not get much publicity. This was in April 1945.
chilling. it's really amazing that 111 years later we are able to see this much detail and have so much knowledge and skill to access something that at the time had likely been thought to be a total loss forever into the abyss. who knows what else we'll be able to access in another 111 years. lost memories, past moments??
He just cleared a family name and a stigma of shame that probably carried on for decades. Can you imagine growing up thinking your father did not launch that last life boat and his failure cost lives? Now his future generations have a new story, that of a man valiantly trying to launch that boat.
I think that’s one of the best digital scans of the wreck I have ever seen, especially of angles that I’ve been really wanting to see of the current state of the rec.
Depressing fact: wherever there are two shoes right next to each other, there was a body there. The shoes didn’t decompose or get eaten by sea life like the bodies did.
its stupid as hell to explore the ship. we have the full schematics/blueprints and materials used so its just a tourist attraction for the mega rich that want their 19 year old sons to die.
This is absolutely brilliant. When they showed in imposed in the field my mouth flew open. That's breathtaking. I wish we were able to have gotten images of it when she first went down but this will do. It's fascinating they are also taking belongings and documenting who they belong to. I hope we can view this at home and go into the different areas inside the ship. Hats off to them for being able to bring her essentially back to life especially when we know her image is falling apart and soon will be unrecognizable
Now we can have lots of films and video games: James Bond in The Titanic; Grand Theft Auto on The Seabed; Alien Invasion - Titanic; Sherlock Holmes Titanic Mystery; Close Encounters of The Seabed; The Bourne Mystery - Titanic; Smiley's Titanic Ghost People; Schindler's Manifest; Indiana Jones and the Ship of Doom; Jurassic Ship; The Octopus Hunter; The Big Lebowski Goes Bowling on The Titanic While Experiencing Lucid Dreams of a Terrifying Disaster.
I dont think they are taking items, but if they are I find that very disrespectful as many have made it clear they want the wreck left alone. Taking items might be fascinating to you but its still basically grave robbing.
Let's do a fact check here. James Cameron took to Titanic some very high resolution cameras to record the wreckage. Not nice to just say low res footage until now.
In the 1930s the BBC announced it was going to start broadcasting in high definition because it was upgrading from 30 lines to 240 lines. You can experience what those high definition broadcasts were like by watching this video again on 240p resolution. Is it disrespectful to say it isn't HD any more?
I'm sure he would've appreciated a complete 3D model of the wreck back in 97 but what his expeditions and special effects crew recreated are pretty damn close.
I used to love the Movie Titanic as a kid. It’s still one of my favorites to this day. It’s amazing how it’s still being studied. Now I wanna watch the movie lol
I think the earliest and best version of that movie was actually called, "A Night to Remember"... imho, still the best version of that story, in spite of only being in black and white. (And mercifully, without Celine Dion's song!)
My grandfather told me that he saw the Titanic.. and that from the beginning he warned all the people that the ship would sink, but nobody listened to him. He was a brave man. He did not give up. He warned them again and again on several occasions.... until they kicked him out of the cinema.
😂 He's truly brave
I remember that there was an assumption around that time through the stories I heard, that the "Titanic would not sink!", It was a new vessel and droves of people who were wealthy went on this vessel. The arrogance was staggering, and I don't understand why people actually shunned others because there was talk of it not being safe. Truly a tragedy! 😮
😆😂🤣
Why wasn't the ship safe.
The saying back then was that “God himself couldn’t sink her,” because the Titanic was the largest ship 🚢 ever built at the time of its launch in 1912. But yes, this was only 11 years after the end of the Victorian era and there was still an attitude of arrogance and superiority that prevailed among the upper crust.
Crazy how we’re still exploring this ship even to this day
Better keep at it because I heard it’s going to disintegrate soon 😢
That ship refects post-brexit UK
Killing time before the comet hits. Bruce Willis' brain melted so we are stuffed
Engineered like a English made car it ain't coming home
Crazy how there's no video on the Durham Report, but then again if the BBC lied about it like they lied about The Twitter Files in their Newsnight clip on it (the only BBC clip on UA-cam about it), it's better perhaps that they're not lying again.
My mothers, father was in charge of installing the lighting in the Titanic. I'm 79 now but when I was 16 I went up to see my grandfather who lived with us and I asked him what the Titanic was like. The look of horror mixed with anguish that came over his face told me never to ask again. He was in his 70's at the time. My grandmother told my mom that when he heard that the ship had sunk, he cried. The only time that he cried in the 50 years they were married. Mom was 3-1/2 months old at the time. They lived in Birmingham. I wish I could have talked to him about what he saw but he didn't want to relive the memories.
My mums 60 and can’t use the internet im impressed
@@lucycripps5692 is she handicapped? What was she doing in her 30s whenever the internet was the norm? Like? For every fuxking one
why would he cry over a ship where he installed lights on? i dont understand the connection there.
@@Dwight_ Think something you made, you touched, meant for pleasure became something brought someone/carried someone to a tragic end...
I never heard why. He was tool and die maker and the apprentice master with a 135 apprentices studying under him, employed by the lighting manufacturer. He would have been from one end of the ship to the other and may have seen flaws that would have doomed the ship and recognized them. The huge loss of life on a ship that he had spent years working on both in the manufacturing and installation of the lighting was probably the reason. As I said it haunted him for the rest of his life.
People foget that the Titanic was only discovered in 1985, 38 years ago. Even after all this time have we really explored the Titanic at its entirety? No. Explorers in the past have only barely touched the surface, this 3D imagine will really bring so much more to life. I'm excited to see what new discoveries are made. Those who worked on this project and are finding new things every day are truly lucky how amazing to be part of this exploration.
They had to explore the entire wreck so many times they ended up with hundreds of thousands of photographs
How sad are you. This is a grave site of 2000 odd souls. Disgraceful
not like we dont have the blueprints of the ship, oh wait we do, its a shipwreck there's nothing special about it. Its only famous because of its tragedy that's it. figuring out how it sunk does nothing but satisfied curiosity. its not even a scientific discovery lmao
@@Churchill867 Lol, stop with this shit. People die everywhere, but people who died on the Titanic are always that 'souls who perished' BS
HERE LIES
TITANIC:
1912-1912
lol
There’s something so eerie about the shoes or the bed frames or even the chairs that these people once used. What an incredible testimony to science and history.
I edited to add that I have absolutely no inkling as to why people are implying I should have watched the video, I did. Nothing in my comment contradicts said video in any way whatsoever.
It's even more eerie considering the reason why the shoes are in pairs. They are all that's left of where a body once came to rest at the bottom of the wreck.
@@natn7346 Yep, shoes and clothes.
People should stop scrolling and instead watch the video first
They say the shoes once held ppl but the bodies deteriorated
Still so completely fascinating and amazing still mostly in one piece
This is really impressive. Capturing this kind of detail would be hard enough on dry land. The clarity is also great
Hello❤
"The clarity is also great" - what a strange statement. Please explain.
@@HROM1908I don't mean to speak out of turn, but I believe they are referring to how clearly defined the details are. For example, where you could see the number on the propeller.
@@HROM1908 Since the main scanning method was SfM photogrammetry (they indirectly say that), I admire how clear the texture is. Yes there are ways to enhance the texture (probably lots of AI postprocessing) but I also imagine there must have been some very advanced lifting trickery involved.
..this will be interesting for the next 10 years...
After all the documentaries and movies, the sinking of the Titanic has become almost a mythic event, so it felt a little strange so see the wreck in such detail, and realise again that the actual remains are still down there where they fell. Familiar, and yet not. May those who perished rest in peace.
Great comment.
Can we just leave these tombs in peace??
@@theatomsinmearebillionsofyears there won't be any human remains there now it's more like a monument. Graveyards are moved all the time for development....
I totally agree
This wont even solve the mystery of the exact iceberg damage. Useless research.
What’s amazing is how accurate Ken Marschall’s paintings of the Titanic wreck were, many of which done decades before we had complete pictures like this
True
I just got the Titanic: An Illustrated History book, with his paintings, and I was speechless. The painting of the ship across the two pages at the very beginning is absolutely breathtaking.
Titanic will NEVER die, the ship may disappear but the legend lives forever!!!
It was never alive. An inanimate object produced by man.
Was a hitjob caused by big time bankers..
it went down like a lead zeppelin
Whats “legend” about it.
@@El_Jefe_S3
The mystery, the story, the accounts, the theory’s, the sheer amount of size of her, the beauty of the ship unmatched, still a icon in today standards and the list keeps going that’s how legendary she is.
It's almost impossible to imagine what the ship would have looked like sitting on the ocean floor when it first sank; We see rust, rot, etc, decades later but the ship was brand new when it sank and therefore she would have obviously been her original colors of red, black and white when she hit the sea floor, and her interior still incredibly lavish. It's just really hard to imagine such a beautiful thing sitting there with no rust and far less collapsed and tattered than what we see now. Having watched plenty of models and digital renderings of the sinking, I've seen what the ship would have looked like, yeah, but it's still extremely difficult to picture it in real life just sitting there rust and rot-free, long before the "rusticles" started to devour the ship and all the other things that have taken place in the years since, causing her to look the way she does over a century later.
Someday, someone will do a gloss up of it and present the picture you had in mind. I think it would be interesting to see. So many things are possible with photography now.
It didn’t look that much different when it sank, minus the rust. The stern section imploded on the way down. It hit the sea floor in many pieces, and probably didn’t look that much different over 100 years ago as it does today.
it looks like the olimpic
I thought rust could only form in the presence of oxygen.
@@cheltersful yes. And water has oxygen.
RIP to all the people who died. Truly fascinating pictures!
It was a hitjob fight beyween bigtime bankers.
Collective murder by White Star
@@andreabrindesi6526 lol what
@@semi5alpha 😂
Funny enough no one talks about the african titanic where over 2000 people died
The recent Titan disaster brought me here. Their five souls unfortunately joined the ones of Titanic on the ocean floor. Both absolutely tragic. May they all rest in peace.
Erm, miss me with the Titan grief. Those billionaires had no business going down there and attaching themselves to the wreck site forever. They desecrated a mass grave site with their greed and hubris.
@@innocentnemesis3519the ceo? Sure he had what was coming to him but the other 4 didn’t deserve this, one was literally a teenager and what it was his fault he died?
My grandfather saw the Titanic, he said he had a deep awful feeling that it was going to sink. He tried to warn everyone, yelling at the crowd.. they kicked him out of the movie theater.
@@innocentnemesis3519still humans though.
@@Clayton-Smalley nice copy and paste, nerd
Was visiting our brother who is retired Navy in Halifax Canada about 15 yrs ago , he took us to all the gravesite where some of the Titanic victims are buried so we could pay our respects. It was very humbling to say the least. May they all rest in peace.
just go to a Titanic museum and exhibit, tune into the energy around you and you can feel the vibs from the items brought up.
Indeed.
Poor jack
Was this in Nova Scotia?
@@lazyoliver345 no- halifax
I've always had this strange fascination about the Titanic, almost an attachment.
To know that there is now a digital scan allows so much more evidence based conclusions to be made, and even more preservation of the wreck.
Truly astonishing.
It’s even better considering all the visits to the actual wreck are literally destroying it
I would suggest you take a look at Titanic Honor and Glory, it's a full recreation of the titanic in the works by a niche development team using gaming software to bring it to reality.
They are integrating VR into it, to allow you to literally walk the ship yourself.
@@Zulisian I love Honor and Glory! I’ve followed their work since they began the game. My favourite work of theirs thus far is the Real-time Sinking of the HMHS Britannic. I played Patroness of the Mediterranean in VR and it was such a remarkable experience
@@Zulisian bro honor and glory is amazing
@@ivywt Yes
That is amazing. Seeing personal items laying there undisturbed all this time is haunting.
the sharks didn't want them- today's sharks are so damn SPOILED
Unopened bottles of champagne that lie at the bottom of the ocean really strikes me. There must be a way to recover those...
@@1vaultdweller4000m down the pressure would implode them
@@crazynorm Wine bottles sure but champagne bottles are resistant
Unopened Buckfast and blue nun. We must recover
Saved myself 250k
And ur life
Lies again? Babies And Roses Ten Commandments
You know a ship is the most iconic in human history when it is used as a unit of measurement as a scale comparison of any other big ship.
i don't do that
I wonder if she was torpedoed in order to murder somebody powerful on board.
Would be interesting the analyse that twisted wreck to look for any signs of an explosion. We need to look under the sand, too.
One can truly never cease to be amazed by the haunting images of the Titanic wreckage. In many ways it’s like going back through time to 1912, but seeing it through today’s lens. Could you imagine seeing this tragedy unfold as a passenger aboard the ship? Watching from a lifeboat (if you were lucky enough) to see the unsinkable Titanic disappear into the depths of the ocean whilst being amongst so many passengers screaming for their lives? It’s absolutely chilling.
Do you have a diary? Maybe a good idea
it’s way worse than you think. the power on the ship went out very quickly. it was just about pitch black. the only sensory input for those still alive were screams, the sound of metal tearing and bending, and freezing pain. many survivors said they never forgot the sound of the ship splitting in half.
Hello
@@ArmanBaig Sad😓. Life is fragile and the universe is scary.
😊😊😊😎❤️😘🎉👍😊😊😊?😊?😊 l 😊😊🔥😀😊😊😊😊😂😊😊😊 l 😊 p 😊😊😊😊 ?😊😊
"Lost Voices From the Titanic" is a great book for anyone interested in this subject. It traces all the mistakes that led up to the final mistake. It was not just the iceberg. It began with the ship's design, building materials, the use of cheaper coal (requiring higher burning temperatures affecting integrity), and lack of binoculars. Plus more. It also tells the stories of all who lost their lives.
Edit: I've become aware that there are several books on this subject with similar titles. The one I'm recommending is "Lost Voices from the Titanic" by Nick Barratt.
Thanks, I will look out for it.
Who is the author?
Meh
Thanks for the recommendation!
Thanks for your recommendation.
Every pair of shoes is essentially someone’s final resting spot. Everything else has disappeared at this point and that’s all that’s left
after 111 years it’s truly unbelievable to see the ruined old wreck of a ship which had an unfinished story and never got to complete her maiden voyage. knowing there used to be thousands of souls there at some point in time who were so hopeful and excited to start a new life/experience something new. hearing about this fatal disaster still gives me chills, I can’t imagine the day when the whole wreck will be disintegrated and how there will be almost no remains of it. rest in peace to everyone who perished 🕊️
Should have gotten iceberg coverage from State Farm.
Well it will take at least another 200 years before it completely disintegrates..
@@ominous-omnipresent-they I couldn’t even get pizza delivery driver coverage from Geico. That’s why I would be afraid to ask iceberg coverage myself…
@@AgentAO7 No, 17 years before its completely gone. Its badly infected with bacteria.
More than 100 years and I'm still fascinated by this ship. Crazy how we’re still exploring this ship even to this day.
Exactly
@@Ninyo242fr…
@@anirudhas1940 wrecked fish and chips on a t bone steak with mayonnaise topping
@@Ninyo242 I'd still go if I knew that I was in a reliable submarine
Think they should call it a day yes.
Mindblowing to see the whole wreck in such detail. The story of this ship will probably never truly end. My family has a direct connection to her through third class passenger and survivor Mr. Charles Edward Dahl, and my fascination for the Titanic will very likely always stay with me because of that fact.
That's such a fascinating story. Have you ever met Mr Dahl in person?
@@anyaaa2801 He died in 1933. So no😜
@@jouhanneusI didn't know they allowed homosexuals on the titanic.
@Wildest Cowboy what how would u know that dude don't talk about what u don't know about😒
My grandfather saw the Titanic, he said he had a deep awful feeling that it was going to sink. He tried to warn everyone, yelling at the crowd.. they kicked him out of the movie theater.
dang almost like you don't need to go down there to see it...
Especially in a carbon fibre submarine
Incredible. I remember watching the grainy video footage of the wreck back in the 1980s. Trying to visualise what it looked like, 35 years ago. Amazing how much the technology has come on since then.
There's a documentary from the late 90s which tells you the whole story. You can even see it sink. The boat they use in the documentary - is much better than this scan. It was sad to see real people's story
I had a black and White copy of the first National Geographic magazine that had shown off everything, including scans of the top and sides of the ship. I need to buy an original copy of the magazine plus the 2012 version.
The thing is technology is only at 1am on a 24 hour clock in terms of what it will end up getting too
@@snookerstones It was in real color. Actually looked like the real ship. And they made it sink at the end. And you saw all the people fall off. This new scan is good for academics but the texture quality is worse.
@@robertwilson3866 but this could be more accurate?
Those underwater shots in the deep ocean are terrifying..
And to think it is 2.5 miles down.
Yeah there's scary as hell I won't go on a ship or a boat to this day because of that
@@maryrowell1122safety and regulations have been approved ever since it set the stage for Safety Awareness
My 9 year old granddaughter is fascinated by the story of the Titanic. I took her to one of the cemeteries here in Halifax, where there are graves of some of the victims, whose bodies were brought here, after the sinking.
The Halifax Maritime Museum has a piece of 1st Class Lounge Paneling from Titanic recovered when ships were sent out to recover bodies. They also had a deck chair and other interior pieces including a newel post facade from the grand staircase.
@@wesleypeters4112 we went there too, I took pictures of my granddaughter in front of some of the Titanic displays….along with a lovely model of the Franconia, which I sailed on, to England, when I was 2 years old!
I was about 9yrs old when the Titanic movie came out so a lot of us had the same interests in the Titanic at her age. It's a great way to start teaching a child HOW to learn history. Often, kids view things from today's perspective and take things for granted. It was a wonderful introduction fir me to learn how to understand the sociology of the time period so I could view the event from their perspective. Truly profound.
did that do it for her?
@tom murphy do what for her?
This is incredible! Love how they scaled it digitally into the stadium.
Always love to know what happened to this beautiful magnificent ship and the people who sadly lost their lives on it. 111 years but the Titanic still fascinates me
don’t forget about all the animals who also lost their lives, so sad ☹️
Rest in peace to all people and animals who died
It hit an iceberg and sank is what happened
@electrickrain all because the lookout wasn't doing his job so gave a late warning
Hollywood drama... The sank was programmed. The boat wasn' t Titanic it was Olympic damaged on the first trip in the 1911. White Star did kill more than 1.500 people just to eliminate anti Fed exponent who were on the boat. Scialups were removed for this reason. Any iceberg on the orizont big fellow... Wake up
@@electrickrainYes certainly, on a Hollywood movie.. 😢😢😢😢
More than 100 years and I'm still fascinated by this ship
Me aswell
fascinated enough to pay $250k to go see it in a submarine?
@@juliakrause8581 not anymore :)
@juliakrause8581 yes, if my trip in 3 months is still going ahead.
It's called history.
Some of us are amazed by the mistakes and triumphs of mankind. This there to learn from.
It seems the world is obsessed with this tragic ship, and the legend just keeps on growing ! Fascinating detailed scan of the once mighty Leviathon of the sea !
What annoys me is how people who think they know it all, mainly these young people in their 20s, are now saying the ship didn't break in half. There are eyewitness accounts about it breaking and these people still think they know more about what happened.
I'm glad they scanned it!
Now anyone can closely take a look at it without endangering themselfes by diving down there in a sub or something similar.
This will probably save lives and money.
3:03 It's a bit scary to think about that those scattered shoes once were on passenger's feet.
We dump our waste in the ocean so it's also weird to think those people who went down with the ship drowned in their own faeces and urine
Or that someone has a photograph of an ancestor that was on the ship wearing something that was shown in this footage
I was just about to make the same comment. It reminds me of the piles of shoes at Auschwitz, there's definitely something very poignant about them that hit you more than anything else.
Well. They might have been in luggage too.
@@Mrclean431 Yes, but the ones that were worn when they hit the ocean floor are in pairs....
Titanic was built less than a mile from my home in Belfast shipyard... I often walk down to the dry dock where she was built, the giant chains that held her are still there...
Belfast might of built her but my city Liverpool was the headquarters of whitestar
@@stevenanderson7461 owned by americans,built by the irish and ran by the british,it was a international ship
I live in Northern Ireland, about an hour away from the shipyard and it is always an intrigue no matter how many times you visit the Quarter or the museum.
@@stevenanderson7461 Belfast might _have_ built her, but I live less than a mile from where the anchor was made (Netherton) and I am literate. Don’t skip school kids!
@@JulieWallis1963 you're pretty much anchored in school yourself.
Beautiful. Placing the scan of Titanic in a stadium is a master stroke; it gives a great sense of proportion.
The talks give the video depth, and it is exciting to see the passion of Atlantic Productions’ CEO.
Yeah, a great sense of proportion, to show you how tiny this ship actually is. It was only 883 feet long. Our biggest cruise ship today is 1,188 Feet long. The fact that the Titanic can fit in a stadium shouldn't put you in awe of its size, it should make you realize that people vastly overhype the size of this ship
@@DaysofKnight Correct, it is overhyped. And it seems to me that the proud boast 'this ship is unsinkable' has been proved wrong. People should be more humble about their technical accomplishments.
@@DaysofKnight that’s just half of the ship that’s shown on the stadium
You can put it in your palm if you scale down, or across a hundred football fields if you scale up.
@@DaysofKnight They only transposed the bow end of the ship. I was twice as long in reality. Yes, she was much smaller than the largest ships today but at that time she was unbelievably huge.
This is good enough for me. No need to take a journey down that deep.
"We don't even know if she hit on the starboard side, she could have grounded"
The ship had a double bottom specifically to prevent damage from grounding allowing water in, as grounding was a really common way for ships to sink (White Star Line had actually lost a ship that grounded off of Halifax not long before Titanic's design process started). And if you look at the wreck, you can actually see some of the iceberg damage as a line on the starboard side of the hull (near the bottom of the ship, under the bridge) which is where boiler room's 5 and 6 were. (Oddly, that line is missing from this model, despite being really clearly visible on photographs of the wreck).
Also even if there were grounding damage, this model doesn't actually capture the bottom of the ship so you'd not be able to tell anything about that anyway.
this dude is arguing with Parks Stephenson bruh
@@hyperdog4565 If the guy is an expert then I'd argue that the quote was taken massively out of context when presented here. There's just simply no way this model would tell us whether the ship had grounding damage or not, and there's visible damage on the starboard side of the wreck that corresponds to where survivors saw water flooding in. I don't see how an expert could argue otherwise.
They could say that perhaps the ship did take grounding damage as an example of an unknown but again - this is just a model made of pictures. They didn't actually do any scans that would show them what the condition of the bottom of the hull is. There's no way to use these scans to determine grounding damage.
@@trekkie1701c I’m sure the news presenter just butchered what Stephenson said. He’s an expert on this stuff
She may have done both. The double bottom may have been breached, since water was bubbling up through the floor of a coal bunker
Sonar scans penetrating below the mud carried out in the 80's showed damaged to the bottom and further damage to the side
WOW incredible images. Really shows the horror and violence that this ship endured.
@@TheDogGoesWoof69 yeah if you want nobody to watch it lmfao
@@TheDogGoesWoof69 isn't that just racist? Sure, back when racism was a norm, there were movies with an all white cast, but those days are long gone now.
Isn't making all black movies defeating the purpose of the BLM equality movement? You're a racist.
@@TheDogGoesWoof69 why?
@@zap296 You know why ...
@@TheDogGoesWoof69 But not everybody on the Titanic was black...in fact, because they're from England, I'd assume most were white
what a big job, this is so thrilling and impressive
That ship refects post-brexit UK
@@babblo1389 you've said that on every comment i've seen so far...
@@babblo1389 are you some kind of parrot-bot?
How what’s new to us?
Yes fellow.. keeping that dream alive also after 100 years isn' t such an hard work.. And with technology it could be very interesting..
That dude should’ve just watched this instead of trying to go down there. I feel sorry for his son RIP
I'm going to the University the son went to
I wonder if Titanic was torpedoed and these guys were murdered for investigating. They had a super high tech sub and I'm not sure why everybody passes it off as a toy. They were billionaires for christ sake.
If you had a billion, would you risk your life if you weren't absolutely 100% positive you would survive?
God, it’s amazing how well the bow has held up over the years, but it’s also depressing to see the condition of the stern, and how badly it’s falling apart.
Yes, the stern suffered an implosion on the way down. Trapped air also means people alive. Having said that, horrific fact is that there were most likely people still alive in the stern, in complete darkness that were conscious and aware of the stern section of the ship being underwater for a brief time (15-20 seconds maybe) before it imploded. Death was instant but that must have felt like an eternity…
Among other things, how the parts impacted the sea floor has an effect....I remember reading that the bow section descended like a male leaf while the stern just plunged. The bow landed...the stern crashed.
The way all the articles spilled out of the ship , it looks as though the stern might have been affected by the breaking up also . If my memory is correct the Titanic broke in two when the bow slammed in to the ocean floor .
@@tommurphree5630 No....she broke in half just under the surface...as the bow went under the stern came up out of the water and put stresses on the hull it was never designed for, resulting in the hull splitting in 2. Had she broken apart on impact, there would not be an 800 meter gap between the halves, no debris field between them, and the halves wouldn't be facing differing directions.
Survivors reported that the stern was vertical at the surface after the bow went under....that's when a lot of stuff fell out of the stern...then the keel holding the 2 halves together broke and they descended separately.
@sam signorelli Hard to say .
That was a long way to the bottom , and yet the stern and front part of the ship are lined up with each other on the ocean floor . I would think if the bow went down first , the shape of it would be different than the stern and the different shapes would effect the path direction as they plowed through the water . It might be possible there was a rebound effect when the bow hit first ,
causing the stern to separate itself and drift slightly backward before it settled .
Seeing the Titanic sitting there in the middle of the stadium is incredible. Just imagine being able to visit the Titanic at a museum site set up using AR headsets technology using the high res scan footage and walking or being lifted amongst the wreckage. Respectfully that would be the most amazing and humbling experience. The ultimate Titanic museum experience.
Yes, and that was only half of her! I know there are bigger ships today but she was huge, the biggest, at that time
You can experience the ship and the sinking in VR right now but I agree, I hope they make the wreck VR/AR accessible as well.
@@lunasmum6869Bigger is an understatement Titanic would be smaller than Cargo ships.. Let it die already.. it's old technology
We wouldn't have needed AR if they had preserved the Titanic's sister-ship, the Olympic, as a museum...
@@_blank-_ The Olympic was different from the Titanic though, they looked the same from the outside but inside the layouts and interiors differed significantly. James Cameron has actually said there were things they didn't know about Titanic which they based off of pictures from Olympic for the movie but after further exploration on the wreck they discovered the Titanic was set up differently which never would have been known otherwise as there are very few photos of Titanic's interior.
It's crazy to think that we're still discovering new facts about the wreck even to this day
I’m glad I’m looking at this on a tv or phone over a small submarine and a small screen.
I honestly can never get enough about hearing of this iconic ship. I have watched 100s of doccies
Me too. I never get tired of watching documentaries and videos. Just mesmerizing
Have you watched the remastered recreation? I watched it earlier, there were no people on it just a recreation of how the ship sank. Although the one I watched had music and background hubbub until it became screaming
Even though it was just a computer-generated video it was terrifying to watch. It's just shocking how so few people realised what was happening until it was far too late 😢
A double surprise. Something interesting on both the BBC and West Hams pitch. 😊
Indeed. That ship refects post-brexit UK
😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂
@@babblo1389are you replying to every fuckn comment...
How truly incredible! We are lucky to live in a time we can create miracles like this. Thank you for the report BBC!
That ship refects post-brexit UK
Every now and then they take a break from their political propaganda and report something even they cant put a spin on.
@@sonofsomerset1695 shut up
@@sonofsomerset1695
Propaganda “anything we don’t like or agree with”
@@sonofsomerset1695 Much like CNN.
Absolutely incredible. She has corroded away so much and yet she is still a giant.
Still fascinating after all these years later. This makes me want to watch the movie all over again. 🚢
Which one?
@@DS9TREK Probably the 1997 one..
And dream on Hollywood lies big fellow!.... 😢😢😢😢
Wow, theTitanic wreck is nearly 4km deep. It's really cool that there's ways to get photos and scans like this.
Are there any deeper ¿?
@@suzyqualcast6269 there are tons of wrecks deeper.
@@suzyqualcast6269 i think bismark is deeper
@@suzyqualcast6269 I think USS Yorktown is 5 km (3 miles) deep at Midway. Last I heard, the old lady was doing fine. I have a terrific book about Yorktown (explored by Ballard), I need to dig it up. EDIT Sorry for the double reply, my Internet sucks.
Et dans l'invisible c'est un cimetière.
That amount of details of shipwreck that lies almost 4 km down in the Atlanic Ocean is truly impressive.
I'm fascinated on the history of the ship. Before it set out to sea. I find the tragedy has been overly sensationalized. Someday I'd like to see someone. Do a heartfelt documentary. On all the victims in remembrance. They deserve to be remembered by the lives they lived. Not by the tragedy that followed. That was no fault of their own. There were alot of heroes on that ship. That give up their lives. To save others. That's what we should remember about the Titanic.😥🚢
I would love to see someone make a VR experience using the model. I think being able to walk on the ocean floor looking up at the reck would be one of the most magnificent and heartbreaking experiences. You could have in VR.
Pretty sure it’ll be part of a horror game :’l
or taking a dump in the captain's head
They have. I believe its available on Oculus.
Titanic hg is making a titanic game with extremely accurate graphics, pretty sure they’ve already released an VR-edition for the beta3, which includes 50% of the ship already!
I’m so
Crazy to see a difference in this version of the wreck since 2012. Especially the stern section, the poopdeck has really caved in at such an angle like the bow compared to the 2012 photos as well as the original 1986 photos
I hope the 3D scan gets released to the public someday.
Rest in peace all the tripulants of the TITAN......❤❤❤❤❤
Hauntingly beautiful still after all these years.
This is amazing. I look forward to following this, and learning the stories of those who were so tragically lost
Im a third generation American, but my great-great-grandparents had bought tickets on the Titanic so the family could immigrate to the States on the maiden voyage. Quite luckily, the White Star Line had overbooked the ship, and my ancestors were denied lodging on the ship. Largest bullet dodge for my family, hands down, considering they were considered third class passengers, the largest majority of which went down with the ship.
By white star murder project...
The biggest & luckiest bullet dodge for real. I can’t imagine how the people who were denied to board/came late so was left behind who were unaware felt when they heard the news
@Michelle Don’t know, actually, but I can hazard a guess that it was the Irish family line. The Titanic had left from Southampton, and had two ports of call that in Cherbourg, France, and Cobh, Ireland.
My family is mostly from Europe, but none of my great-grandparents are French and the only family line that lived close to the port of call of Cherbourg was the Belgian line that was smuggled out of Belgium during WWI, so it rules out the Cherbourg stop.
The only two other stops it could have been were the preliminary English port of Southampton, where the English or Welsh lines would have likely left, or the Irish line from the Irish port of call of Cobh.
Given my family was third class up until my mother finally got us into somewhat of a middle class lifestyle, any family from mainland Europe likely would not have had the resources to take a boat across the English Channel and then take a ship across the Atlantic.
Saw this all for free on UA-cam! 👏🏽
FFS 😂
“Dozens of shoes “That single line instantly sent a shiver down my spin
The shoe survive time due to the tannin used to make leather. Microbes don’t enjoy the taste of the cured leather.
@@nzs316 I don’t think many things do. Then again I’ve never tried it so
@@digitaal_boog in 1981 my grandmother died and they dug up the family plot to bury her there.
They exposed the remains of my grandfather whose wool uniform, leather boots, leather accoutrements still survived.
Macabre and fascinating at the same time to see the man that I’ve never met.
Especially when I saw the small green shoe in 3:07
A shiver down my spin? That’s a good one.
It's like time travelling into the past even if it is rusted.
This is really impressive, Crazy how we’re still exploring this ship even to this day 🛥🛥🛥🛥🛥🛥🛥
The unopened champagne must be worth a fortune
Thats hilarious I set the comments to newest, and was gonna search for one mentioning the champagne, and yours was the top one 😆
😂
Definitely its 100year old champagne
Who's here since the five went missing .... Is the titanic still claiming lives? I pray they are found 😱😮
They died. RIP.
Titan & Titanic finally met and you can add 5 more victims to the previous number 1500
@@IndramaniYadav-r2ono you can’t. They didn’t die on the titanic. They died 100 years later on a sub. Not the same thing.
Sadly they imploded......
We can see what they would have seen from the safety of an armchair, for a whole lot less money. The only difference being, we can't say we experienced it at depth.
Just the thought of how the even went and especially in the dark! Gives me chills like hell
Why do we remember the Titanic in such a major way? I believe it is an eternal reminder to us. How dangerous a feeling of invincibility is. How quickly our hubris can turn to disaster.
That one section image of her gave me a cold shiver. For one moment in time someone was finally able to raise the magnificent RMS TITANIC. I've always called her MY TITANIC.....
Amazing! No ship wreck has ever be capturing but Titanic has captured the heart and mind.
It really has.
That ship refects post-brexit UK
I have never understood what was so important about a boat that sunk, it just baffles me why anyone would even care.
@@dambrooks7578 It became a brand and they will never stop milking it as much as they can.
@@dambrooks7578 this is a stupid comment
@@dambrooks7578 You do know that over 85% of the people onboard died right, you insensitive jerk.
Amazing video the deceased wld never believe how famous they've all become but, showing respect is the most important thing here. "may all rest in peace."
It's the ocean, those bodies are long gone
@@atrumluminarium bruh...
@@atrumluminarium... But their souls still live on... We are energy and energy never dies, it transfers!
@@Worldsamess2024 That's very debatable, how do you know?
Well they are dead so it's unlikely they will be woken or disturbed. 😂
The beginnings of so many closures.
Rest in peace to all who lost their lives
This video is good enough for me, don't need to travel to the bottom of the sea to take a look..
Amazing work done by the scientists and tech used to make this copy. It makes me so sad that the titanic went down. However, the shipwreck helped shape new rules for ships regarding so many different things like lifeboats.
I’ll never stop being fascinated with the titanic
Glad to see the old lady is holding up. All those shoes on the ocean floor were once a person, literally a human body that decomposed down to its bones, leaving sturdy leather behind. The Titanic resting place is hallowed ground. Respect.
Those shoes were likely from luggage.
@@bob6yt7 but still you need to respect the place, 1,500 people mostly third class on their way to a new life, drowned or got hypothermia.
@@bellahanson1132 its the unopened champagne bottles for me. I wonder if it's still drinkable.
@@stevendalloesingh rich people would pay so much money to drink the titanic wreck champagne
@@bellahanson1132 Of course, just pointing out that a lot of the debris is from luggage.
This in the stadium is not a representation of the entirety of the ship. This is just the bow and center section. The stern lies astern of this part facing the opposite direction since she broke in half either on the surface or on her way down.
I saw a video a year or so ago, showing the Titanic's dive to the ocean bottom that was based on the current information of where items where found. With so much more information I would like to see this model of the changes in Titanic as she sank recreated.
This is so amazing. I would have thought we knew all there was to know about the Titanic. It's like we get to start all over again.
I’ve just been to the Harland and Wolff shipyard and the Titanic Experience in Belfast. I went to her pump house and dry dock. You really got a feel for exactly how big she is. I’m very excited for this documentary.
I don’t think the journalist realizes that the places where you see shoes are the final resting places of those who died. Their bodies have withered away and all that remains are their shoes still in the place where their remains once were. James Cameron spoke on this in an interview.
One of the most heartbreaking are the pair of women's boots with the shoes of a small girl nearby.
@ko7577 No one fucked in the boiler room and certainly no one fucked on the "gravesite". Honestly what are you talking about? You seem quite confused. If you are referring to the scene in the car that was in the forward hold of the ship, not the boiler room. Do you think no one had sex on the Titanic? Do you honestly think it unrealistic to show such behavior? Also you do understand the movie was filmed on a sound stage and not at the wreck site correct? James Cameron went to extreme lengths to be as historically accurate as possible, yes some characters and relationships are fictionalized for the sake of story telling but certainly there were romances on board. I don't think it's at all offensive to portray things that could have actually happened. In fact the only part of the movie which was true fiction was the part where the officer pulls out a gun and shoots someone, Cameron has expressed deep regret over this scene as at the time he was thinking more of the story telling and not of the impact that scene may have on the descendents of that man. He has apologized for that scene and admitted that it was wrong for him to put that in the film.
It’s important not to forget that the Titanic is, in the words of one of the last survivors Eva Hart, a *graveyard.*
I agree totally leave it alone a grave yard and you wouldnt dig up an actual graveyard
@@marmac4483 It's not just a graveyard. It's a historical landmark that'll be gone one day and should be documented as much as possible for future generations.
@@SirDankleberry I agree with you but the woke brigade might not they might have something to say they are trying to destroy history and fiction books for children I could give you instances but I won't I am sure you know l still think it should be left alone it's a graveyard and if some other people in years to come when they can get down they will rob it I can't believe there is shoes still there after all this time I am sure there are a lot of valuables dow
Tell that to the Russian pirates who go down there to steal stuff and the rich socialites who get married on the wreck's deck in a submersible because they want to reenact Cameron's stupid movie.
Why?
This is one of the most impressive examples of photogrammetry I've ever seen. Excellent work!
Thank u
I like that they scanned the whole titanic I always thought that growing up eventually it would be gone but now it can live on forever
*A lot of people know that Titanic broke into two pieces but what a lot of people do not know is that it actually broke into four pieces. Yup, you read that right! Let me explain: When Titanic broke between the third funnel and fourth funnel, in between those funnels was the kitchen areas and the pantries and plates, cups, etc., where everything was stored for cooking and cleaning etc. so when you look on the ocean floor, you'll see thousands of plates and cups and wine bottles all screwed along the ocean floor! Now, Titanic's Bow and Titanic's Stern are in two separate pieces but the other two pieces are scattered near the boils but in smaller and smaller pieces because where the break up was, it was so much stress, it literally tore apart those structures*
The Wilhelm Gustloff torpedoed by a Russian submarine in the Baltic was a third of the size of Titanic but carrying three times the passengers.
9000 plus passengers died ,but it does not get much publicity.
This was in April 1945.
It’s a shame it’s not as remembered. Such a tragedy
It killed Nazis Germans so it doesnt matter (this is meant to trigger)
So close until the end of the war. Had the soviets not sunk it thousands of civilians more could have seen the end of the war.
Have you seen the film Die Gustloff? It’s in German
@@InfiniteApollo12 No,thank you.
This continues to always be an interesting story. I never get bored viewing stories about the Titanic. Thanks for posting this video.
chilling. it's really amazing that 111 years later we are able to see this much detail and have so much knowledge and skill to access something that at the time had likely been thought to be a total loss forever into the abyss. who knows what else we'll be able to access in another 111 years. lost memories, past moments??
If only someone had sent this to those who died in the oceangate implosion. Here it is for free, you can see it better than looking through a window
He just cleared a family name and a stigma of shame that probably carried on for decades. Can you imagine growing up thinking your father did not launch that last life boat and his failure cost lives? Now his future generations have a new story, that of a man valiantly trying to launch that boat.
I think that’s one of the best digital scans of the wreck I have ever seen, especially of angles that I’ve been really wanting to see of the current state of the rec.
Depressing fact: wherever there are two shoes right next to each other, there was a body there. The shoes didn’t decompose or get eaten by sea life like the bodies did.
Crazy how we’re still exploring this ship even to this day. More than 100 years and I’m still fascinated by this ship.
Paraphrasing
whats so fascinating about it
its stupid as hell to explore the ship. we have the full schematics/blueprints and materials used so its just a tourist attraction for the mega rich that want their 19 year old sons to die.
@@cptkirkpyro5656wtaf bro
@@cosmo5076nah bro, it is stupid. 250k? Come on. There's thousands of better things to do with that money
Give thanks to the cameraman who went on time by filming this incredible video
There was cameras robot doing the job
This is absolutely brilliant. When they showed in imposed in the field my mouth flew open. That's breathtaking. I wish we were able to have gotten images of it when she first went down but this will do. It's fascinating they are also taking belongings and documenting who they belong to. I hope we can view this at home and go into the different areas inside the ship. Hats off to them for being able to bring her essentially back to life especially when we know her image is falling apart and soon will be unrecognizable
Now we can have lots of films and video games: James Bond in The Titanic; Grand Theft Auto on The Seabed; Alien Invasion - Titanic; Sherlock Holmes Titanic Mystery; Close Encounters of The Seabed; The Bourne Mystery - Titanic; Smiley's Titanic Ghost People; Schindler's Manifest; Indiana Jones and the Ship of Doom; Jurassic Ship; The Octopus Hunter; The Big Lebowski Goes Bowling on The Titanic While Experiencing Lucid Dreams of a Terrifying Disaster.
I dont think they are taking items, but if they are I find that very disrespectful as many have made it clear they want the wreck left alone. Taking items might be fascinating to you but its still basically grave robbing.
❤❤
@@Rkd196 Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha! :)
Hello dear
Let's do a fact check here. James Cameron took to Titanic some very high resolution cameras to record the wreckage. Not nice to just say low res footage until now.
It's all relative. Cameras a decade later blow the older ones away.
In the 1930s the BBC announced it was going to start broadcasting in high definition because it was upgrading from 30 lines to 240 lines. You can experience what those high definition broadcasts were like by watching this video again on 240p resolution. Is it disrespectful to say it isn't HD any more?
We’re not allowed to say one camera is better than another because James Cameron will get upset?
Leo! I’ve watched your videos when I was younger!
I'm sure he would've appreciated a complete 3D model of the wreck back in 97 but what his expeditions and special effects crew recreated are pretty damn close.
If only this 3D scan had been enough for the explorers on the Titan....
I used to love the Movie Titanic as a kid. It’s still one of my favorites to this day. It’s amazing how it’s still being studied. Now I wanna watch the movie lol
I think the earliest and best version of that movie was actually called, "A Night to Remember"... imho, still the best version of that story, in spite of only being in black and white. (And mercifully, without Celine Dion's song!)
I thought it was dumb, as a kid even
😂
111 years later and she’s still famous God rest those poor souls 🙏🏽
@ko7577 wake up? She’s dead foo
Those billionaires in that sub should’ve just watched this videos for free
Who else is here after what happened too the titanic submarine?
Me
Submarine was called Titan
Your mom