Titanic Wreck Ocean Floor

1985 the prow of the hms titanic as she lies on the atlantic ocean floor south of newfoundland.
Titanic wreck ocean floor. Seventy three years after it sank to the north atlantic ocean floor a joint u s french expedition locates the wreck of the rms titanic the sunken liner was about 400 miles east of newfoundland. The exact location of the titanic wreck was determined after the bow and stern sections of the titanic were discovered and recorded by dr. Robert ballard in 1985. While the assumption is that decades in the ocean would have led to total disintegration the discovery of the wreck of the titanic in 1985 also prompted a debate over whether there could be human remains embedded in the wreckage two and a half miles below the surface of the atlantic.
The titanic had on board a turkish bath several libraries a squash court and a heated swimming pool. Titanic s rudder measured 78 feet 8 inches high and 15 feet 3 inches long weighing over 100 tons. Geological location of the titanic shipwreck. The wreck of the rms titanic lies at a depth of about 12 500 feet 3 8 km.
The rms titanic was visited by divers for the first time in 14 years and the ship that was once a picture of luxury was found in the process of being swallowed up by the ocean floor and ravaged. The positions of the bow and stern are 49 deg 56 min 49 seconds west longitude 41 deg 43 min 57 seconds north latitude and 49 deg 56 min 54 seconds west longitude 41 deg 43 min 35. The canyon floor is covered by sediment debris and slumps transitioning into the titanic sediment wave field a large muddy plain characterized by dunes sand ribbons and sheets formed by strong. Photos were taken during submarine explorations of the site and the release of some of those photos suggest.
The luxury liner even had an infirmary with an operating room. 2 37 mi about 370 miles 600 km south southeast off the coast of newfoundland it lies in two main pieces about a third of a mile 600 m apart. The titanic used 14 000 gallons of drinking water. The bow of the titanic wreck as it looked in 1996.