In 1994, Dik Barton leads a dive to explore an uncharted section of RMS Titanic.
A passive acoustic recorder located around 900 miles from the implosion site picked up the sound, US Coast Guard officials ...
Chilling new audio, released publicly late last week, captures what researchers believe could be the exact moment the doomed Titan submersible imploded, instantly killing all five people inside the ...
The recording was captured by a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration passive acoustic recorder that was about 900 ...
The Titanic is back in the news. A sub sent to investigate its wreckage recently met a similar fate and disappeared in the depths of the North Atlantic. The wreckage of this sub, Titan, was found by a ...
A newly-released audio recording of the Titan submersible’s final moments sheds new light on the timeline of the ill-fated 2023 underwater expedition.
The officials confirmed that blast boom was the sound from the sub imploding before it could reach the site of the Titanic wreck in the North Atlantic Ocean on June 18, 2023. The report stated ...
The sound was picked up from a National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration device - roughly 900 miles from where the sub ...
Officials said that boom was the sound of the sub imploding before reaching the Titanic wreck on the bottom of the North Atlantic Ocean on June 18, 2023. According to the New York Post ...
United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Lee Zeldin appeared on Fox Business Wednesday to discuss ...
Listen to the chilling sound of the Titan submersible's implosion, captured by NOAA. A tragic loss of all five crew members.
The brief, staticky recording includes a loud noise that sounds somewhat like an underwater thunderclap, then goes silent.