it was aboud 1.1 square meter's and it got little bigger after that.
It didn't really cut a hole, but rather it popped rivets.
The exact depth of the iceberg that hit the Titanic may never be known. There are photographs of the iceberg that supposedly hit the Titanic, and the size at the surface was estimated at 100 feet high, upwards to 400 feet long.
90% of an iceberg is underwater. Ships or any other type of boats sailing in very cold regions have the possibility of misjudging the size of an iceberg and hitting them.Eg. titanic.
The exact size of the iceberg will probably never be known, but according to early newspaper reports the height and length of the iceberg was approximated at 50 to 100 feet high and 200 to 400 feet long. However, these dimensions only relate to the estimated size above water. Around 85% of an iceberg is below water. Therefore multiplying the estimates you have an iceberg with a volume of between 810,00 and 3,240,000 square feet.I'm not sure what you're asking so I'm going to interpret it as "when the Titanic struck and iceberg, how much of that iceberg was above water?". The iceberg that the Titanic struck looked small because only about a ninth (1/9) of the iceberg was above water. In reality, the iceberg was immense, with the rest (8/9) of it underwater. A portion of the berg that was underwater sunk the Titanic.
The iceberg that sunk Titanic may have been spawned from the Jakobshavn Glacier from the Ilulissat fjord in western Greenland in 1909. At that time it was enormous, a mile long and more than a billion tons. After it left the Greenland coast it had lost half its size.
Even though the captain received iceberg warnings, they thought that they would see the iceberg in time to turn away. But because of the ship's massive size and speed, it would not turn away from the iceberg in time.
90% of an iceberg is underwater. Ships or any other type of boats sailing in very cold regions have the possibility of misjudging the size of an iceberg and hitting them. The ship can crash into an iceberg that creates a hole in the ship and floods everyone on the ship. Example: Titanic
The exact depth of the iceberg that hit the Titanic may never be known. There are photographs of the iceberg that supposedly hit the Titanic, and the size at the surface was estimated at 100 feet high, upwards to 400 feet long.
90% of an iceberg is underwater. Ships or any other type of boats sailing in very cold regions have the possibility of misjudging the size of an iceberg and hitting them.Eg. titanic.
I doubt if any one thought of bothering to measure it at the time.
The exact size of the iceberg will probably never be known, but according to early newspaper reports the height and length of the iceberg was approximated at 50 to 100 feet high and 200 to 400 feet long. However, these dimensions only relate to the estimated size above water. Around 85% of an iceberg is below water. Therefore multiplying the estimates you have an iceberg with a volume of between 810,00 and 3,240,000 square feet.I'm not sure what you're asking so I'm going to interpret it as "when the Titanic struck and iceberg, how much of that iceberg was above water?". The iceberg that the Titanic struck looked small because only about a ninth (1/9) of the iceberg was above water. In reality, the iceberg was immense, with the rest (8/9) of it underwater. A portion of the berg that was underwater sunk the Titanic.
The iceberg that sunk Titanic may have been spawned from the Jakobshavn Glacier from the Ilulissat fjord in western Greenland in 1909. At that time it was enormous, a mile long and more than a billion tons. After it left the Greenland coast it had lost half its size.
Even though the captain received iceberg warnings, they thought that they would see the iceberg in time to turn away. But because of the ship's massive size and speed, it would not turn away from the iceberg in time.
Titanic was heavier than any other ship of the time, thus making it the largest ship in the world. It had a NEARLY identical sister ship called the Olympic, which was the same size, but several tons lighter. Therefore, Titanic was the biggest ship in the world, because it was heavier than any other ship.
The Titanic was big so the size worked against it which it did and the iceberg was right in front of it.
The Titanic hit an iceberg which was called a 'Growler'. This is an iceberg which is small in appearance above the water but is really huge under the surface of the water. They are very dangerous and difficult to notice from the distance.
Around 3 hours. That is very fast compared to it's size and shape!
When an iceberg was spotted in their path, they tried to steer it to port, and put the engines in reverse. However, due to it's size, it couldn't turn in time, therefore the starboard side struck the berg, therefore ripping a long gash in the ship's hull.