Showing posts with label Titanic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Titanic. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

What are some little-known facts about the Titanic?

 

  1. Just imagine, it took almost 73 years to find the wreck of the Titanic. The image below shows the remaining debris from the Titanic wreck.

2. The Titanic was as tall as an eleven-story building and as long as almost four city blocks, making it one of the largest ships in the world.

3. Millvina Dean (1912–2009) was only a few months old when she boarded the Titanic with her family. She was the youngest victim of the accident.

4. The estimated age of the first snowflakes that formed the iceberg that the Titanic hit is 15,000 years old.

5. None of the 30 technicians on board survived. They remained on board to keep the power running as long as possible so the others could escape.

6. The Titanic carried 64 lifeboats, each capable of carrying 20 people. Most of the lifeboats were not even filled to capacity.

7. The richest passenger on the Titanic was John Jacob Astor IV. His net worth was approximately $85 million, or two billion dollars today. Astor perished with the Titanic.

8. With a production cost of 200 million dollars , this film cost more than Titanic itself.

9. The Titanic's shipbuilding company, Harland and Wolff, insists that the Titanic was never touted as unsinkable as it was portrayed in the film. They claim that the 'unsinkable' myth is a result of people's interpretation of articles in The Irish News and The Shipbuilder magazine. They also claim that the myth arose after the disaster.

10. First class

tickets

varied widely in price, ranging from $150 (about $1,700 today) for a simple bed, to $4,350 (about $50,000 today) for one of the two Parlor suites. Second class tickets were $60 (about $700), and third class passengers paid between $15 and $40 ($170-$460).

11. Hitting an iceberg wasn't the only reason the Titanic sank.

To further clarify, a 30-foot-long line mark is visible on the ship, directly in front of the coal bunker. The area where the mark is located is also the area where the ship struck the iceberg. This leads experts to believe that a fire must have damaged the area first, with the iceberg then causing further damage.

12. Jack and Rose are fictional characters, but their story was partly inspired by real Titanic passengers Henry Samuel Morley and Kate Florence Phillips.

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Why didn't people on the Titanic use wooden furniture to stay afloat?

 Despite there being a lot of floating debris left after the Titanic disappeared underwater the victims never had a chance as they were soaked in near-freezing water that would have killed them, even if they could avoid other panicking people and remain composed and focused enough to attempt finding and lashing pieces of debris together and getting out of the water.

While the majority of the death certificates issued stated the cause of death as drowning, the vast majority in fact died from hypothermia. Let’s be clear, they “did.” Specifically, when (untrained) people unintentionally go overboard or fall into water, one of the first things they reactively do (often in a panic) is try to grab anything around them to keep themselves afloat. But more importantly, unlike how the movie portrayed it, the act of using floating debris to survive is far more complicated than it sounds. For example, even if a chair floats, you can’t exactly just sit or stand on it while it’s in the water - unless you have incredible knowledge of ocean physics and balancing strength.

People indeed used the debris to try to keep themselves afloat. Sudden immersion into freezing water typically causes death within minutes, either from cardiac arrest, uncontrollable breathing of water, or cold incapacitation; almost all of those in the water died of cardiac arrest or other bodily reactions to freezing water within 15–30 minutes.

The main problem all of the passengers faced when abandoning ship was extreme cold, not drowning. As for trying to put together a makeshift raft, few probably had the skills to do so. Even if they did, with panic and chaos all around, being denied access to the lifeboats, and the ship sinking right underneath of them, most were likely not in a state of mind where they would be able to put together a makeshift raft out of furniture or other items.

Monday, February 23, 2026

How could the Titanic have been saved after the collision?

 

At 2:20 AMon April 15, 1912, the Titanic plunged to the bottom of the North Atlantic in 12,500 feet of water.

A fatal collision with an iceberg had doomed over fifteen-hundred passengers and crew to a watery grave, leaving survivors, contemporaries, and historians alike to start question the what if scenarios.

What if the Titanic was slower?

What if the Titanic had more lifeboats?

What if the Titanic had struck the iceberg head on?

Another what if that is not discussed as much is a matter of geography and oceanography: what if the Titanic had sunk in shallower waters?

This may seem like an outlandish scenario, given the depth that the ‘unsinkable ship’ now rests, but it is actually a very poignant question.

It may surprise readers to know this, but it is estimated that a mere seventy kilometres is all that separated the ship from the Grand Banks of Newfoundland.

This is only slighty farther than the Connecticut city of Stamford from Manhattan — the latter being downtown New York City, which the ill-fated steamship would have docked had tragedy not dictated otherwise.

Titanic wreck site (red) in the North Atlantic (dark blue) just south of shallow waters (light blue)

Theoretically speaking, in the 160 minutes it took for the vessel to go down, she could have travelled over 62 nautical miles — or 115 kilometres — giving her more than enough time to reach the vicinity if she had not been sinking.

In reality, she would have probably gone down further, so that was not an option.

So we go to another very real question:

What if Captain Edward Smith had taken the Northern Route instead of the Southern Route?

The Northern Route was about 200 kilometres north of where the Titanic sank, which would have placed her well inside the Grand Banks of Newfoundland.

This was intended to be the original destination of the Titanic — a course that would have actually shortened the voyage by 200 kilometres, due to the smaller circumnavigational sphere the higher north one travels, further disproving the myth that she was attempting to break a transatlantic record — which was only diverted on the day leading up to the sinking when a larger volume of icebergs were spotted in the vicinity.

Iceberg fields were much thicker here, so if she could not avoid striking a block of ice taking the Southern Route, we can “assume” that her luck would run out here as well.

Only she would no longer be facing a watery grave some 3,800 metres deep.

We would be talking about a much shallower grave.

Much shallower.

As in under 100 metres deep shallow.

The Titanic herself was over 270 metres long, meaning the depth of the water even 70 kilometres north of her historical position was barely one-third of her length.

This would have surely prevented her from breaking apart at the surface.

But would it have kept her afloat?

No.

At 100 metres deep she would have probably gone down similarly to the Lusitania — another ship of similar length and tonnage who sank in water of a similar depth.

In this situation, the only thing that may have been to the ship’s advantage is that if the water depth had been even moderately shallower, the stern would not have risen so high in the air, which would have prevented the air from being ejected so quickly during the “final plunge” — likely delaying its demise by at least several minutes or more.

According to some general research I have done, it appears that the bow of the Titanic itself was a little over 18 metres high when, while the boat deck — the tallest part of the ship, minus the funnels and masts — was 29 metres.

Were there any areas in the Grand Banks of Newfoundland that were shallow enough for the Titanic to sail to?

Yes.

Various shoals across the region have been reported to have depths that were under 30 metres, with some areas being as little as 15 metres deep — these are prehistoric islands that were submerged approximately 13,000 years ago during the last great Ice Age.

The Southeast Shoal was the strongest bet, since she was not only the closest major region to the wreck site, her average depth of 40–50 metres would have been only a fraction the length of the Titanic, with some specific spots reportedly having only 15 metres of depth — far more shallow than the height of the bow itself, and nearly twice the height of the ship at boat deck level

If the Titanic had been able to scout a nearby shoal during her doomed hours, she could have potentially survived by not fully submerging beneath the surface — leaving even the bow a little above water in the most shallow spots.

These are a big what if, because there are several reasons as to why it would not have made any practical sense to tempt this in 1912:

  1. The Titanic did not have the means to scan the seabed floor with modern instruments
  2. Even if the Titanic had found a shallow area, there is no guarantee that currents would not have pushed it back out into deeper water
  3. Though hindsight proved otherwise, the Titanic could have just as easily have capsized, as many ships throughout history have done, making this shallow depth practically useless, and wasting precious minutes

In the end, the crew did what was best, given the circumstances and what they knew in 1912.

History is filled with close calls, and the sinking of the Titanic was no exception.

Nonetheless, that question will remain in the minds of those alternative history enthusiasts who will never know the answer one way or another…

What if?

Saturday, December 6, 2025

If "Titanic" were a Bollywood movie made in the same time period, then who, according to you, would be in the lead role?

 Rose DeWitt Bukater (Film's Narrator) - Preity Zinta

Jack Dawson (Penniless Artist) - Shah Rukh Khan

Caledon Hockley (Rose's Betrothed) - Salman Khan

Ruth DeWitt Bukater (Rose's Mother) - Ratna Pathak

Fabrizio De Rozzi (Jack's Best Friend) - Arjun Rampal

Thomas Andrews (Titanic's Architect) - Nawazuddin Siddiqui

Molly Brown (A Helper In Ship's Evacuation) - Smita Jayakar

Captain Edward John Smith (Titanic's Captain) - Pankaj Kapur