There was no ship called Britannica in the Atlantic during the sinking of Titanic. There was Britannic, which was one of it's sister ships, but it didn't actually set sail until 1914. There was also a Britannic that was built in 1929 and there was Britannia that was built in 1840 and decommissioned in 1880.
You may be thinking of the Californian, which was within 20 miles of the Titanic at the time of its sinking. However, they did not go to her aid.
The actual iceberg would have surely been dissolved in a few days that far south.
The Carpathian was around 50 miles from the Titanic at the time of sinking.
we think the whistle on the titanic could be heard from 200 miles away
Titanic had a triple-chime whistle that could be heard from as far away as 11 miles.
5019.38 kilometres (3118.9 miles)
because it was so far away from the surface
OIympic was too far away to make a difference.
The Titanic sunk out in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean, far away from the boundaries or jurisdictions of any cities. The Titanic was supposed to dock in New York, but never made it to it's destination
Titanic was far. She had left Ireland but she was (relatively) close to North America. She was about 400 miles south of Newfoundland.
According to the survivors that saw what happened the titanic tried to turn away but due to the illegal speed the captain had changed to they didn't see the iceberg in time to actually get far enough away from it if you watch the movie it will help you a lot more:)
By far, the largest part of Titanic was her hull.
The Titanic Is 60 ft down in the mud.