YES many valuables were found
No skeletons were found in the wreck of Titanic and never will any be. All bones of the victims have long ago been dissolved by calcium carbonates.
There have been thousands of ships that have sunk or been wrecked in the Atlantic. One famous wreck is the RMS Titanic
It's about 2.5 miles below the surface of the North Atlantic. That depth is far beyond where a diver can go, but specialized deep-sea submarines can visit the wreck site.
There are reproductions of period-newspapers on sale at Titanic Museums but a few original newspapers are in the hands of private collectors like Christie Seyglinski.
No. Any bodies that could have been in Titanic at the time of the sinking have been long since dissolved by calcium carbonates.
No, none of the survivors of the titanic wrote about the titanic's wreck itself
No skeletons were found in the wreck of Titanic and never will any be. All bones of the victims have long ago been dissolved by calcium carbonates.
Of the 549 women-and-children sailing Titanic, 156 didn't survive Titanic's wreck
Yes there is loads of types of fish live around the wreck of the Titanic. I don't know exactly what type live there but look up wikipedia to find out more information.
No. Any bodies that mighty have been there would have long since been dissolved by calcium bicarbonates in the water.
The Titanic shipwreck is a mass graveyard, which is one of several arguments against disturbing the wreck. Over 1000 people went down with the ship and were not recovered.
yes 1 in the cargo area but it sank with the titanic and it was never found
There have been thousands of ships that have sunk or been wrecked in the Atlantic. One famous wreck is the RMS Titanic
There have been many proposals to recover the wreck of Titanic - even almost immediately after the sinking - most of them preposterous and some of them vaguely reasonable on paper ut all of them impossible. At this point, the wreck is far too delicate and too weighted down with rusticles and any attempt to recover her will destroy the remnants of Titanic.
It's about 2.5 miles below the surface of the North Atlantic. That depth is far beyond where a diver can go, but specialized deep-sea submarines can visit the wreck site.
There are reproductions of period-newspapers on sale at Titanic Museums but a few original newspapers are in the hands of private collectors like Christie Seyglinski.
The Titanic will never float again (not the original one, at any rate). The wreck of the Titanic was found several years ago, but it is in an extremely bad state of decay. It rests on the bottom of the North Atlantic in two major pieces, about a mile down. A great deal of it is recognizable and might seem initially to be sturdy, but what remains of the hull is so fragile that it is crumbling away beyond any hope of recovery. The last survivor of the sinking, an infant at the time, died in 2007.