Bergs do not last that long, no matter how big they are. That one was probably gone within weeks of the disaster.
Technically yes. The Titanic ran into an iceberg. The Titanic was built to withstand a head-on collision with an iceberg however it ran into the berg from the side which tore a hole into the hull. . . It is speculated that the Titanic would not have sunk if she ran straight into the iceberg however this is merely a speculation because it is impossible to go back in time and change it. . .
no one sunk it they ran straight into an iceberg but the rumor was that there was a lose bolt that fell into the ocean and started to take on water when they left their first stop but they definitely sunk when they hit the iceberg.
The problem with the ice on the Titanic was that the crew did not have binoculars to spot icebergs effectively. Additionally, the crew failed to slow down the ship despite receiving iceberg warnings. These factors contributed to the collision between the Titanic and the iceberg, leading to its sinking.
Scientific analysis, based on eyewitness accounts, has determined that the ice was 96 feet above sea level.
The actual iceberg has never been determined. It would have surely been dissolved in a few days that far south anyway, and several were photographed but tidal studies indicate that they were in the wrong place(s).
Titanic ran along side of the iceberg, and it ripped a gash in the hull. This let lots of water in, and because they couldn't stop the water coming in, pump it out fast, or isolate the affected compartments, the ship sank.
It ran into a iceberg, breaking the ship walls, filing it with water and tipping the ship. the bow went down first and the pressure caused the titanic to snap in half. The front then sunk, the back following shortly after.
They are chunks of floating ice drifting away from polar regions. The density of ice is just a little less than the density of sea water, so most of the volume of an iceberg is below the surface, and so a small-looking iceberg can have a huge volume of ice below the surface. The Titanic ran into an iceberg and was holed below its waterline so the water rushed in and the ship sank.
The reason Titanic sank from the iceberg: It tore open a 300-foot long gash on the Starboard side, exposing the six forward, water-tight compartments to the sea. The moment all six were exposed, Titanic's death was a certainty. Had it been a head on collision, she would have survived, and continued on to New York. However, when Boiler Room 6 went under, Titanic's fate was sealed. Two hours and forty minutes later at 2:22 P.M. on April 15, 1912, Titanic hit the ocean floor.
none, titanic ran on coal.
The Titanic struck the iceberg, and as the ice ran along side of the hull, it ripped it open. This let in lots of water. The gash could not be plugged, the pumps could not get water out as fast as it was coming in, and the affected compartments could not be isolated. Thus the ship eventually went down.
Every partof the titanic was ruined.The main parts of the titanic that were damaged were the last eight cabins. These cabins were peeled back like a tin can and the boat began to sink causing it to snap in half.