Despite such all-consuming coverage, one major player in the disaster is often overlooked - the iceberg that sank Titanic. Photo: An iceberg close to the site of Titanic's sinking, 15 April 1912 ...
The statue of a Greek goddess once held a place of honor in the Titanic’s First Class Lounge, but it was thrown out from the wreck when the ship struck an iceberg and sank in the North Atlantic ...
Three people were injured after an iceberg wall collapsed at a Titanic-themed museum in Tennessee ... There is also a location in Branson, Missouri. Ice Cube Says He's 'Staying Clear' of Cyclone ...
The exhibit includes life-sized cabin reconstructions with beds, tables and chairs, and more than 130 types of artifacts.
At the time of construction, the RMS Titanic was a behemoth among ships ... the ship’s wireless radio operators kept buzzing ...
Given its size, that may take years.” There is little fear of a “Titanic II” as boats in the region will be well aware of the iceberg’s location. Once A23a breaks up, though, the smaller ...
Like hundreds of others she stood on the dock in Southampton desperate for news after the Titanic, the world's biggest ocean-going liner, had hit an iceberg and sunk on her maiden voyage.
According to a recent study, the giant iceberg responsible for sinking the Titanic could have been the result of snow that fell into southwest Greenland about 100,000 years ago.
At 11.40 pm on the 14th April 1912 Titanic struck an iceberg and sank two hours forty minutes later, at 2.20 am on the 15th April. Almost 1500 people perished in the disaster. For almost 100 years ...
Despite such all-consuming coverage, one major player in the disaster is often overlooked - the iceberg that sank Titanic. Ice Engineer Claude Daley explains how icebergs change personality at sea.