The Secret of How the Titanic Sank
New evidence has experts rethinking how the luxury passenger liner sank
For decades after the disaster, there was little doubt about what sank the Titanic. When the "unsinkable" ship, the largest, most luxurious ocean liner of its time, crashed into an iceberg on its maiden voyage in 1912, it took more than 1,500 of its 2,200 passengers to the bottom. As the ship slipped into the North Atlantic, so, too, did the secret of how and why it sank.
Two government investigations conducted immediately after the disaster agreed it was the iceberg, not any weakness in the ship itself, that caused the Titanic to sink. Both inquiries concluded the vessel had gone to the bottom intact. Blame for the incident fell on the ship's deceased captain, E. J. Smith, who was condemned for racing at 22 knots through a known ice field in the dark waters off the coast of Newfoundland. The case of the Titanic was considered closed.
But lingering questions about what might have sunk the seemingly indestructible ship never completely disappeared. In 1985, when oceanographer Robert Ballard, after years of searching, finally located the ship's remains 2.5 miles down on the ocean bottom, he discovered that it had, in fact, broken in two on the surface before sinking. His findings made the Titanic rise again in the public imagination. Why had it cracked, experts wondered? If the official inquiries were wrong, was the invincible Titanic weak? A few years after Ballard discovered the wreck, the first pieces of the ship were brought to the surface, raising even more eyebrows when they seemed to offer physical evidence that low-quality steel might have caused the disaster. In 1997, James Cameron's film Titanic, largely mirroring the scientific consensus at the time, seared Titanic's terrifying last moments, with its stern soaring high into the air before it cracked in two and disappeared, into popular memory.
Still, the search for answers about the Titanic didn't end there. In two new books, a group of historians, naval architects, and materials scientists argue that fresh evidence has further unraveled the familiar story of the Titanic, raising more questions about what caused the disaster. In What Really Sank the Titanic: New Forensic Discoveries, Jennifer Hooper McCarty, a materials scientist at Oregon Health and Science University, and Tim Foecke, a scientist at the National Institute of Standards and Technology, make the case that it wasn't the ship's steel that was weak; it was the rivets, the all-important metal pins that held the steel hull plates together. Titanic's Last Secrets, to be published next month, describes the work of Richie Kohler and John Chatterton, wreck-diving historians who believe two recently discovered pieces of the Titanic's bottom prove the ship's stern never rose high in the air the way many Titanic experts, including Cameron, originally believed. The two divers, whose discovery of a lost German U-boat was chronicled in the book Shadow Divers, say the ship broke up and sank while still relatively flat on the surface—a potential sign of weakness, they believe, that was covered up after the disaster.
When the Titanic's keel was laid down in 1909, Harland & Wolff, the Belfast shipbuilder that constructed the ship, certainly didn't believe its design would still be controversial a hundred years later. Built in response to a rival company's construction of a new generation of fast liners, Titanic and her sister ships, Olympic and Britannic, were the biggest ships ever made—from bow to stern, they were almost 900 feet long, dwarfing even the world's biggest skyscrapers. Specially outfitted to handle the challenges of the North Atlantic, including big waves and major collisions, they were also supposed to be among the safest. The Titanic could stay afloat with four of its 16 watertight compartments flooded, more than anyone could imagine on a ship of its size.
On the night of April 14, 1912, though, only a few days into the Titanic's maiden voyage, its Achilles' heel was exposed. The ship wasn't nimble enough to avoid an iceberg that lookouts spotted (the only way to detect icebergs at the time) at the last minute in the darkness. As the ice bumped along its starboard side, it punched holes in the ship's steel plates, flooding six compartments. In a little over two hours, the Titanic filled with water and sank.
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Reader Comments
titanic
the titanic was close to new york if i was in the titanic crew i wound said put 1990 life bouts
WHat i ThiNk
Honestly, i think that no one should doubt God. When rose's hateful fiance says "God himself cannot sink this ship", he was stating that basically even God cant take down an unsinkable ship and to me the thesis is, watch wat you say and never doubt God because it is through him that everyone adn everybody is living now so what makes you think he cant wreck a ship just 2 send a message to people, hey i mean there are several ways you kan look at it. And c they were first class people so they already think life is just easy for them because they are wealthy and have no limited beings and they treat the 3rd class people like dirt. So there are many different ways to look at it. I admit it was a sad movie and its cool how the 3rd class guy falls in love with the first class girl, and the melody and muzik they play just makes it even more romantic and sadening. But this movie isz good and the men who were watching out for the iceberg need to pay attention more and be more alert because that iceberg was pretty big at the point where they spotted it. I would have spotted that iceberg way before i got that close up on it and they shouldnt have speeded up the ship trying to reach the U.S. so fast. But you know, i guess things just are meant to happen to teach a lesson, but other than that this is an outstanding movie to watch at home jusz chillen and stuff.
Titanic
My thoughts about the Titanic is that it was the captins fault for going too fast that he had no time to turn the ship a different way.I have watched the movie so many times and i loved it.This movie was so romantic but sad at the same time.I cant believe that this ship sunk because it was so big and it looked as if it was built right and it looked strong.I feel bad for all of those people who died.I cried after i saw this movie.When I first heard about the titanic I was surprised that it sunk and it was amazing.
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