The Titanic could be gone in 30 years
-
Lilith — 2 years ago(June 22, 2023 01:43 AM)
Funny you should mention this. I'm currently rewatching
Supernatural
, S9 E4 "Slumber Party," which is about Dorothy bagging the wicked witch from Oz. Dorothy indicates in this episode she is L. Frank Baum's daughter. She's a hunter, and at the 22 minute mark, Sam and Dean accidentally reopened a portal to Dorothy's time, letting her and the "trapped" witch back in. Dean knocked over the bottle the witch was trapped in, and she escaped.
I think Dorothy has the hots for Charlie, and she, in turn, has the hots for Dot. On an amusing note, Charlie and Dorothy made "poppy bullets," and the woman playing Charlie played a character by the name of Poppy in a TV series T
he Magicians
.
I'm just waiting for Kevin Bacon to make an appearance.
"Your emotional state is not my responsibility." – Warren Smith -
CrystalRaindrops — 2 years ago(June 22, 2023 01:31 AM)
This is interesting - that article says the captain's bathtub was already disintegrated in 2019, but it was found again in 2021!
Footage captured from a recent expedition to the wreck of the Titanic shows the famed bathtub in the captain’s quarters thought to have been lost to decay is still intact.
But the latest survey of the shipwreck shows its disintegration continues due to salt corrosion, ocean undercurrents, and a bacteria that is steadily munching its way through the shell.
The Titanic is estimated to have less than 30 years left before it disintegrates entirely.
The "recent expedition" mentioned in the 2021 article above was from OceanGate!
This video from 2012 clearly shows the tub: -
CrystalRaindrops — 2 years ago(June 22, 2023 01:43 AM)
Thanks!
I wasn't looking for this, but I just came across this OceanGate video from last year (surprisingly, it has 0 comments). "Climb in," it says in the title.
(Part of it was in a video I posted earlier, but I hadn't seen this one before.)
This is the description:
It can take five passengers to The Titanic on the ocean floor, you can pilot it with a gaming controller…and it has a toilet. Climb aboard Titan, a unique submarine used to explore the world's most famous shipwreck. -
CrystalRaindrops — 2 years ago(June 22, 2023 02:50 AM)
Should items be brought up from the ocean floor or is it grave robbing?
Bob Ballard had found the Titanic.
Having discovered the wreck, Ballard could have claimed “salvage rights,” but he considered that grave robbing and chose to leave the Titanic as he found it. But by the time he returned 18 years later, other companies had swooped in and swept up more than 6,000 artifacts, either selling them — $25 for a hunk of Titanic coal, for example — or putting them in a Titanic museum. It may have been Ballard’s only regret about the whole experience.
“It had turned into an ugly carnival, an affront to the fate of Titanic and all those who had lost their lives in her final hours,” he writes.
In this 2018 video, Ballard said, "I realized I was at a cemetery, and nothing should be taken from this site."
But as it says above, other companies took the items:
RMS Titanic conducted salvage expeditions in 1993, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2000 and 2004, according to the NOAA. Since 1994, the company has collected thousands of artifacts, including top hats, China dinner plates, and a grand staircase cherub, according to their website.
This is from January 2020: -
CrystalRaindrops — 2 years ago(June 22, 2023 10:20 AM)
Should items be brought up from the ocean floor or is it grave robbing?
I demand replies to this excellent question. If the items weren't brought up from the ocean floor, they'd eventually be gone forever. But at the same time, it's considered a gravesite; so should the items have remained where they were? -
CrystalRaindrops — 2 years ago(June 22, 2023 10:24 AM)
Even in death, the "classes" were treated differently:
According to titanicfacts.net, CS Mackay-Bennett was instructed to treat the bodies differently depending on whether the victims were crew or First, Second, or Third class passengers. This is because there was not enough space or embalming supplies onboard to store all of the recovered bodies and because there were legal requirements that any bodies had to be embalmed before entering port.
The bodies of first-class passengers were embalmed, placed in coffins, and stored in the rear cable locker. Second-class passengers and crew were embalmed and wrapped in canvas before being placed on ice in the forward cable locker. Third-class passengers were generally buried at sea.
https://interestingengineering.com/culture/dead-of-the-titanic-2