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What was found eating the Titanic?

The Titanic is being consumed by a newly discovered, rust-eating bacterium named Halomonas titanicae, which thrives in the deep-sea, iron-rich environment. These bacteria create, and live within, icicle-like, porous rust formations called "rusticles," which are breaking down the ship's hull. Smithsonian Ocean +4
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What was really found in the Titanic?

The 2000 expedition by RMS Titanic Inc. carried out 28 dives during which over 800 artefacts were recovered, including the ship's engine telegraphs, perfume vials, and watertight door gears.
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What item from the Titanic was auctioned off for $100,000?

Several Titanic items have sold for around or over $100,000, including a silver brandy flask from survivor Helen Churchill Candee, a first-class dinner menu, and a gold pocket watch belonging to Isidor Straus, with the pocket watch fetching a record price in 2024, exceeding estimates significantly. A rare first-class menu from the first night sold for $102,000 in 2023, and Isidor Straus's letter also sold for over $200,000. 
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What was eating the Titanic?

One of these is a species of bacteria -- named Halomonas titanicae after the great ship -- that lives inside icicle-like growths of rust, called "rusticles." These bacteria eat iron in the ship's hull and they will eventually consume the entire ship, recycling the nutrients into the ocean ecosystem.
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Why were 116 bodies buried at sea from Titanic?

Bodies that were damaged or decomposed beyond preservation were buried at sea. In addition, the first Halifax ship to recover bodies, Mackay-Bennett, found so many that her crew ran out of embalming supplies and had to bury many victims at sea as regulations only allowed embalmed bodies to be brought ashore.
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The Titanic Is Being Eaten by Bacteria

Are there still bones on the Titanic?

No, there are virtually no human skeletons left in the Titanic wreck because the deep-sea environment (cold, high pressure, acidic water) and marine life rapidly dissolved bones and flesh within years, with only shoes and scattered personal items remaining to suggest where bodies once were. While some argue pockets of preservation might exist deep within the wreckage, most experts agree that the overwhelming majority of remains disintegrated, unlike older shipwrecks found in shallower, less harsh waters. 
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How fast did people freeze in Titanic?

Titanic passengers in the near-freezing Atlantic water (around 28°F / -2°C) died very quickly, with cold shock causing unconsciousness in 10-15 minutes, and death from hypothermia following within 30-45 minutes for most, though a few hardy individuals might have lasted slightly longer, but nearly all perished before rescue. 
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Why can't we swim to the Titanic?

Crushing depths

On the seabed 3,800m (12,500ft) underwater, the Titanic and everything around endures pressures of around 40MPa, which are 390 times greater than those on the surface.
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Were there sharks in the water where Titanic sank?

While sharks were present in the North Atlantic, there are no confirmed reports of shark attacks the night Titanic sank. The icy waters were the real killer, taking lives in minutes.
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Is there gold on the Titanic still?

While many of the passengers possessions are still in the North Atlantic Ocean, victories and discovery efforts have brought back mesmerizing tokens of the Edwardian period. Gold jewelry, broaches, pocket watches, and other accessories have been recovered over the years.
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What happened to the violin from the Titanic?

It was sold by auction house Henry Aldridge & Son in Devizes, Wiltshire, England, on 19 October 2013 for £900,000 ($1.7 million US). The violin now resides at Titanic Belfast Museum and is open to public viewing. It has two large cracks and is no longer playable.
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What's the most expensive thing on the Titanic?

A gold pocket watch recovered from the body of John Jacob Astor, the richest man on the Titanic, sold on Saturday at auction for a record–breaking £1.175 million ($1.471 million). It is the highest amount ever paid for Titanic memorabilia.
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Was the Titanic's captain's body found?

No, Captain Edward Smith's body was never recovered after the Titanic sank, and his final moments remain a mystery, though many conflicting survivor accounts describe various heroic or tragic possibilities, like going down with the ship on the bridge or diving into the sea. While he perished with the ship on April 15, 1912, no remains matching his have ever been found, with theories about his death ranging from heroic to ignominious.
 
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How much did a Titanic ticket cost?

The cost of a third-class ticket aboard the Titanic cost 7 pounds, which translated to $35 at the time, according to Cruise Hive. Second-class tickets were 12 pounds, or $60. First-class berths started at 30 pounds, or $150. Those who purchased a first-class suite paid 105,000 pounds, or over $130,000.
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Did the Titanic tell the Californian to shut up?

Yes, the Titanic's radio operator, Jack Phillips, famously told the nearby SS Californian to "Shut up! Shut up! I'm working Cape Race!" when the Californian tried to warn them about being surrounded by ice, dismissing the message as interference with important passenger telegrams just before the Titanic struck the iceberg. This rude rebuff, though sometimes disputed in exact wording, is a key moment in the disaster, as the Californian's operator then went to bed, missing the Titanic's distress calls. 
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Did the cook on the Titanic survive?

He survived the ship's sinking, and became notable for having survived in the frigid water for an exceptionally long time before being pulled onto the overturned Collapsible Boat B with virtually no ill effects.
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Does the last meal still exist?

Contrary to the common belief that all last meal requests, regardless of their complexity, must be fulfilled, various restrictions are in place over what can be requested. In the United States, most states give the meal a day or two before the actual execution and now use the euphemism "special meal".
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How cold was the eater in the Titanic?

On the night of April 14–15, 1912, the Titanic sank into the frigid waters of the North Atlantic. Some 1,500 people perished, and for most of the victims, the cause of death was hypothermia, not drowning. The water temperature was approximately 28 ℉ (−2 ℃), which is below the freezing point of water.
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Is the Titanic's iceberg still there?

No, the iceberg that sank the Titanic is long gone, having melted away in the warmer waters of the North Atlantic within weeks or months of the 1912 disaster. Icebergs typically last only two to three years, and this one, likely calved from a Greenland glacier in 1910 or 1911, melted completely by late 1912 or 1913.
 
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Is the girl who survived the Titanic still alive?

No, the main "lady from Titanic", Rose DeWitt Bukater, is a fictional character, and the actress who played her as an old woman, Gloria Stuart, passed away in 2010 at age 100. The real last survivor of the Titanic disaster, Millvina Dean, who was an infant on the ship, died in 2009 at 97, meaning all actual survivors are now deceased.
 
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Why did it take 73 years to find the Titanic?

It took 73 years to find the Titanic primarily due to the extreme depth (over 12,000 feet), the vastness of the search area, and crucial technological limitations that prevented effective deep-sea mapping until the 1980s, with the discovery made possible by advanced sonar and remote-controlled vehicles (ROVs) used by Robert Ballard's expedition in 1985. Early searches were hampered by imprecise sonar, harsh weather, and the wreck's location in a deep valley with confusing geological features. 
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How long did it take the Titanic to sink from hitting the iceberg?

With five or more compartments breached, however, the tops of the bulkheads would be submerged and the ship would continue to flood. Titanic sank in two hours and 40 minutes. Captain Smith felt the collision in his cabin and immediately came to the bridge.
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Did a 7 year old survive the Titanic?

Yes, 7-year-old Eva Hart was a prominent survivor of the Titanic disaster, escaping with her mother in Lifeboat 6, while her father perished; her vivid memories and outspoken advocacy for insufficient lifeboats made her a key historical voice, as detailed in her memoir, A Girl Aboard the Titanic. She was among the last survivors to recall the sinking and lived a long life, working as a singer and welfare officer, becoming famous for her clear recollections and criticism of the lack of lifeboats. 
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What was the Titanic's fatal mistake?

The Titanic's fatal flaw wasn't a single issue but a combination of factors, primarily brittle rivets (poor quality wrought iron in cold water made them snap, opening seams) and flawed watertight compartments (bulkheads didn't reach high enough, allowing water to spill over like a bathtub). These structural weaknesses, compounded by ignored iceberg warnings, excessive speed, and insufficient lifeboats, led to rapid flooding and the catastrophic loss of life when it struck the iceberg. 
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