The Titanic did not really change course after its impact with the iceberg. The ship turned slightly to avoid hitting the iceberg more than it had, but it was still headed towards America.
The lookouts on Titanic spotted the iceberg with less than forty seconds to impact.
The iceberg did not make any holes in Titanic. The impact separated the plates by popping the rivets (which were riveted together, not welded) and the water breached through.
If you mean the Titanic - see related question.
Titanic hitting the iceberg straight on has been proposed many times. There is a picture of the Arizona which had a head-on collision and although she survived it with a crumpled bow, it's agreed that at the speed Titanic was heading, a head-on impact would have been catastrophic, buckling the entire hull and she would have sunk in minutes, not hours.
One important event was the accidental ramming of the Olympic. When Titanic's sister ship was returned to the yards for repairs, this delayed the maiden voyage of Titanic, setting her off later - on her collision course with doom.
the iceberg because all of the impact on the iceberg can make it hotter than a lit flame.
The lookouts on Titanic spotted the iceberg with less than forty seconds to impact.
no the iceberg did not hit the portside of the ship.
the scientific revolution was believed to change history of course and people socially and intellectually
The lookouts only spotted the berg with less than forty seconds till impact.
The chances of the way that Titanic hit the iceberg were a million-to-one. She sideswiped the berg in a way that the impact popped the rivets between the plates of the hull, allowing water to breach.
Most of an iceberg is hidden underwater so it looks smaller than it really is. Most of what technology is hidden from sight because most of what technology does is noticeable by what works and what stops working all of a sudden
of course not
All survived the actual impact. roughly 2/3 died later that night.
yes
Limit the possibilities of the change, so therefore the impact will not effect as much,
Culture is often compared to an iceberg because only a small part of it is visible above the surface, while the majority of cultural values, beliefs, and practices remain hidden beneath. Just like an iceberg, the hidden aspects of culture influence what is seen and impact the overall cultural landscape.