Never
One or both of the lookouts saw the iceberg before collision, and the pilot tried to steer away, but the forward speed of the Titanic took it into the iceberg anyway, smashing in the hull on the starboard (right) side near the bow.
The lookouts on Titanic spotted the iceberg with less than forty seconds to impact.
There have been entire chapters and perhaps entire books written about Titanic's lookouts and the iceberg. Author Tim Maltin had proposed a "refraction" theory with devastating success. One of the many reasons, however, is that when water is rough, as it usually is, water sloshes against the base of an iceberg, making it visible. However, on the night of the sinking there were no waves and nothing to see (and no moonlight with which to see them).
The actual iceberg would have surely been dissolved in a few days that far south.
a iceberg that the people on board didn't see
frederick fleet
No, you cannot smell an iceberg before you see it. Icebergs are made of ice, which does not emit any odor. Additionally, they are typically located in cold, open waters where other scents may be diluted or nonexistent. Therefore, visual detection is the primary way to identify an iceberg.
Fredrick Fleet is the first person to see the iceberg captin smith captin smith I thought it was the watch people
Go to the Iceberg and you'll see a lot of penguins standing on top of the point In Iceberg. Stand on top of the point in Iceberg. And then your spy phone will alarm green.
mediterranean
Highways.
The island is in the Mediterranean