Go to 41°43'42.27"N 49°56'53.65"W and zoom in until you see the 2 halves of the Titanic. Then drag the yellow man from the right hand side of the screen and drop him in between the two halves. Then you will be able to see the Titanic in 3D, in Ground-level View mode.
Note: Make sure you have the 3D Models layer checked in Layers panel and 'Water Surface' checked in View menu.
or
Under Oceans layer check the item Shipwrecks then navigate to the North Atlantic where you'll see a shipwreck icon where the Titanic sunk roughly 614 miles east of Nova Scotia. Click on the icon and it will fly you near to a 3D model of the wreckage.
I don’t know
Google Earth has a shipwreck layer which includes the Titanic but the Olympic (the Titanic's sister ship) never sank. The Olympic had a collision with a British warship in 1911, and had to be brought back to the shipyard in Belfast to be repaired. Other than this, it had a long sailing career, until it was finally retired and scrapped in 1937. You can, however, find the Titanic on Google Earth. See the related question.
Nope. If you enable the Shipwreck layer in Google Earth found under the top-level Ocean layer, you'll see hundreds of shipwreck icons (e.g. Titanic, U-400, etc.) but none for the Lusitania which was recorded to be sunk at 51°25′N 8°33′W.
First expand the Ocean layer in the Layers panel then click the Shipwrecks layer.Now if you look in the North Atlantic you'll see an icon for the RMS Titanic which if clicked takes you to ocean floor where the Titanic sunk and broke into two pieces.
Download google earth 5.0 and the search these coordinates: 41°43'36" N, 49°56'54.06" N and you'll see the titanic underwater.
First select the Shipwrecks layer under Ocean in Google Earth in the Layers panel. This layer will shows icon for shipwrecks around the world including the RMS Titanic with details about the ship, when/why it was sunk, often with video clips, etc.Now visit the location where the titanic sunk which is in the North Atlantic ocean approximately 2,000 km east of New York City and 600 km southeast of Newfoundland. Next double click on the shipwreck icon labeled 'RMS Titanic' to jump there.If you want to see a 3-D model of the Titanic at the bottom of the ocean floor then make sure '3D Buildings' layer is also enabled, which you can click on.
Google Earth
You can only see yourself in Google Earth if you were in a photo that they took. If you where, then you can see it in any version.
First you download Google Earth from google's web site. You can start by entering an address (or just a city name) in the fly-to-search panel and see Google Earth zoom to that location. Next check out the Google Earth user's guide (which includes video tutorials) and see what else Google Earth can do. See related links below.
yes all you have you have to do is go on google xx
You can start by entering an address (or just a city name) in the fly-to search panel and see Google Earth zoom to that location. Next check out the Google Earth user's guide (which includes video tutorials) and see what else Google Earth can do.
The Google Earth plugin is free. It can be downloaded with the free version of Google Earth (they're bundled together) or by itself from Google's website (see link below).UPDATE: Google Earth Plugin has been deprecated as of December 12th, 2014.
First expand the Ocean layer in the Layers panel then click some of the layers (e.g. Shipwrecks) to see what's available. For example if you look in the North Atlantic you'll see an icon for the RMS Titanic which if clicked takes you to ocean floor where the Titanic sunk and broke into two pieces.