
Image: Public Domain (NOAA-http://www.gc.noaa.gov/images/gcil/ATT00561.jpg)
Weather Channel, “The Titanic Four Decades After Discovery: What the Wreck Has Taught Us,” The Weather Channel, September 2, 2025, https://weather.com/news/news/2025-09-01-titanic-wreck-discovered-40-years-ago-what-we-have-learned.
The Titanic wreck, resting nearly 12,500 feet beneath the ocean’s surface, has become more than just a historical site. It’s a living laboratory for scientists studying one of Earth’s most extreme environments. Despite the cold, darkness and crushing pressure, the wreck has transformed into an artificial reef supporting a surprising range of marine life: from sponges and starfish to colonies of bacteria that feed on the ship’s iron. These microbes produce “rusticles” or icicle-like formations of rust that slowly break down the steel. They are showing how life persists even in the harshest conditions.
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CNN , “His Search for the Titanic Concealed a Top-secret Military Operation. How the Iconic Discovery Unfolded,” CTVNews, August 31, 2025, https://www.ctvnews.ca/sci-tech/article/his-search-for-the-titanic-concealed-a-top-secret-military-operation-how-the-iconic-discovery-unfolded/.
Ballard had what he called a “light-bulb moment” while mapping the debris of the Scorpion sub that was pivotal to the mission success. Its debris field was a mile-long trail, not in a small circular area as expected. Heavier objects sank straight to the seafloor, but lighter debris went down at a slower rate, and ocean currents carried them farther away. He realized that the Titanic, which fell to a similar depth as the Scorpion sub, would have a similar, if not larger, debris field and that looking for this stream of detritus would be easier than finding the hull and other heavy parts of the vessel. “It was the technology and the knowledge of how to use it,” Yoerger said. But also “the big thing that led to our success was Ballard’s strategy. He wasn’t trying to find the ship, he was trying to find the debris field, which is a much bigger target, and one that’s particularly well-suited to finding with your eyeballs.”
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“BBC Audio | Witness History | Discovering the Titanic,” last modified September 1, 2025, https://www.bbc.com/audio/play/w3ct746j.
In September 1985, the wreck of the Titanic was discovered around 400 nautical miles off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, during a joint American-French expedition. In 2010, Louise Hidalgo spoke to some of the explorers and listened to archive recordings. Eye-witness accounts brought to life by archive. Witness History is for those fascinated by the past. We take you to the events that have shaped our world through the eyes of the people who were there.
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Public Domain (Wikimedia Commons)
Martin Heath, “Remembering the Northamptonshire Locals Lost on the Titanic,” last modified September 1, 2025, https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0ml3ggj32xo.
Forty years on from the discovery of the wreck, the disaster is still remembered in communities affected by it across the UK, the USA and beyond. The landlocked county of Northamptonshire, for instance, lost a squash player, two shoemakers – and a man who seemingly did not exist.
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Jonathan Mayo, “The Hare-brained Plans to Raise the Titanic That Included Filling It With 27 Million Ping-pong Balls and Pumping It Full of Vaseline,” Mail Online, August 30, 2025, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-15048237/plans-raise-Titanic-27-million-ping-pong-balls-Vaseline.html.
The ideas were:
Drop explosives to blow up the ship to release the body of John Jacob Astor. Abandoned after his body was found. (1912)
Magnets to pull Titanic to the surface using a submarine to first locate and then raise and tow to New York. Charles Smith, an engineer from Denver, raised money to do it but it was pointed out that he would need 3,000 magnets to do this. Idea abandoned. (1914)
Attempt to locate wreck using underwater explosions so that sonar waves would bounce off the hull and be detected. Unsuccessful. (1953)
Danish inventor Karl Kroyer, who had successfully raised a sunken freighter using ping-pong balls, was interested in doing the same for Titanic. However, the extreme depth of Titanic made it unfeasible. (1964)
Douglas Wooley, who famously claimed to own the wreck, came up with the idea using an ultrasonic blast to free Titanic and use nylon bags filled with hydrogen to lift it to the surface. Abandoned when it would take ten years to inflate all the nylon bags. (1975)
After the wreck was found (in two pieces), several other ideas emerged. One was to pump the ship full of Vaseline which would make the ship buoyant. Another was to use liquid nitrogen to encase the wreck in ice to bring it up.
It appears the only successful raising was done in the fictional novel Raise The Titanic by Clive Cussler. An excellent novel but a terrible movie (they truncated the story so badly that Cussler never signed a movie deal again). However, seeing Titanic raised to the surface made for great visual. The only real highlight of that now forgotten movie.
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[Parody]
Ian Searle, “Crew of the Titanic Right Not to Issue Life Saving Equipment to Drowning Passengers,” NewsBiscuit, August 29, 2025, https://www.newsbiscuit.com/post/crew-of-the-titanic-right-not-to-issue-life-saving-equipment-to-drowning-passengers-1.
“We don’t want to give them hopes of surviving the icy cold conditions,” said a spokesperson for The White Star Line. They went on to defend the wait for policy announcements, saying, “it was right that whoever got the top job, after the Captain locked himself in the wheelhouse, would want to look at all of the options, properly costed” when they take charge. “They will do more – you don’t have long to wait,” Tom the Cabin Boy told BBC Radio Four’s Today programme, while slipping into a low-cut evening gown and announcing, “Women and children first!” through a loud hailer. “It is clear that this will be absolutely at the top of their in tray,” he went on, as he snatched a cork Life Preserver from a passing child.
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Becky Kagan Schott, OceanGate
Taylor Delandro, “Titanic Mission Specialist Defends CEO, Says ‘The Design Worked’ – NewsBreak,” NewsBreak, last modified August 27, 2025, https://www.newsbreak.com/newsnation-2045693/4199875217460-titanic-mission-specialist-defends-ceo-says-the-design-worked.
The mission specialist argued the sub’s design was sound, noting that Titan successfully reached the Titanic multiple times over a decade of testing. “The hull went down at least 15 times to Titanic. The design worked. They reached the Titanic,” they told the Post. Instead, they suggested maintenance could have been at fault: “Probably what happened was a maintenance issue. They have to blame something.”
[The Coast Guard report, which is quite lengthy, points out that many safety standards were violated. And the material used for it was, according to the Coast Guard, lighter and more susceptible to damage. He also used the very regulations on such craft against each other since there were different and contradictory regulations. And the workplace climate was such that anyone who pointed out safety and other flaws would soon be out of work.]
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Suggested Titanic Reading
Behe, G. (2012). On board RMS Titanic: Memories of the Maiden Voyage. The History Press.
Ballard, Robert D. Exploring the Titanic. Reprint. Madison Press Books, 2014.
Brewster, H. (2013). Gilded Lives, Fatal Voyage: The Titanic’s First-Class Passengers and Their World. National Geographic Books.
Fitch, Tad, J. Kent Layton, and Bill Wormstedt. On a Sea of Glass: The Life & Loss of the RMS Titanic. Reprint. Amberley Publishing, 2015.
Lord, Walter, A NIGHT TO REMEMBER, Holt Rinehart and Winston, New York, New York, 1955. Multiple revisions and reprints, notably Illustrated editions (1976,1977,1978 etc.)
Lynch, Don & Marshall Ken, TITANIC AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY, Madison Press Books, Toronto, Ontario Canada, 1992
Rossignol, K. (2012). Titanic 1912: The Original News Reporting of the Sinking of the Titanic. Createspace Independent Publishing Platform.
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