The iceberg that sank the Titanic in 1912 is no longer in the same location, as icebergs drift due to ocean currents and melting. It is likely that the iceberg has since broken apart or melted entirely, as icebergs have a limited lifespan. The precise location of that specific iceberg is unknown, but icebergs generally originate from Greenland's glaciers and can travel south into the North Atlantic. Today, the site of the Titanic's sinking is marked by a wreck site approximately 12,500 feet deep in the North Atlantic Ocean.
Today ships have radars that see through night and fog, making it possible to avoid ice bergs.
Today the Titanic wreckage is in on the bottom of the north Atlantic ocean.
Yes. They were on the Titanic when they were babies.
The titanic actually hit the iceberg at 11:40pm on 14th April 1912 & sank at 2:20am on 15th April 1912. Out of 2222 onboard, 1517 people perished leaving only 706 surviving in The Titanic's Terrible Tradgedy. There are no more more living survivors today, the last one was Millvina Dean, having only been 2 months at the time, she died in May, 2009 at 97 years old.
happy birthday
Titanic struck an iceberg in the middle of the night which buckled her plates, causing her rivets to pop. Water entered between the plates and caused her to tip and then to fill. She cracked and then her separate pieces sunk.
There is no way to know how old it was. Today ice samples are taken of glaciers that can tell the age of the glacier, but to tell the age of an ice burg is nearly impossible without a sample.
Today ships have radars that see through night and fog, making it possible to avoid ice bergs.
Today the Titanic wreckage is in on the bottom of the north Atlantic ocean.
no nobody on the Titanic is living today
No. Only partial replicas of the Titanic's exterior and interior exist today.
Yes. They were on the Titanic when they were babies.
There are cups left Both parts of the titanic
They didn't, the Titanic sunk and is still there today.
Titanic was built at Queen's Island, today known as Titanic Quarter, in northern Ireland.
The plural of ice is ices. As in "eat your ices before they melt".
Titanic was built for $7.5M (in 1912 dollars) which is about $400M today.