A member of the ship’s staff that survived by jumping into the ocean and rescued by a lifeboat displayed his pocket watch in an interview and the time had frozen at 2:20am. Edit: The staff member was Frank Prentice, an assistant purser. His 1979 interview is on TH-cam.
@@BeckVMHthat's so eerie! The same happened with a clock discovered in the rubble from one of the Twin Towers from 9/11. The clock was still at the time of when the plane hit the tower.
@@BeckVMHhis best friend also jumped with him but got hit by a part of the ship and was severely injured, prentice stayed with him till he died and then got to a lifeboat after his friend died
Most furniture, even for the poorest people was well made back then. It's only since the second world war has thet been a demand for cheaply made furniture that can be discarded when the owner gets bored of it.
Probably the most memorable Titanic artifact uncovered for me was a violin of one of the band members with a memento and signature from his fiancee engraved into it
It is an amazing photo when you think that not only did it survive the sinking. It also survived the bow slamming into the ocean bottom at about 30 knots.
Makes me wonder about all those illustrations I saw as a kid showing that the bow sank to the bottom basically pointing straight down, twisting in a spiral the whole way. It had to have been mostly level the whole time.
@@christianpetterson1784 Yes, they tested in a pool with a model of the bow section of the ship how it would have sank and it went down in a falling leaf type patern every time, going forward stalling then back again then forward. I've heard people argue since then that they got it wrong but that's how I believe it went down, in a rocking motion.
@@christianpetterson1784 Gs would've been keeping it in place probably. You see videos of it online like that fighter pilot pouring water while upside down.
Pressure is generally only a problem if there’s a difference (assuming the new boiling and melting points aren’t issues, a problem glass doesn’t have). The water on the outside of the glass is pushing in with dozens of pounds of force, but the water inside is doing the same thing, causing it to equalize. It’s intact for the same reason the drinking glasses in your kitchen are.
@@sirsancti5504Titanic engineers introduced sEcReT aLiEn TeChNoLoGy to keep glasses from breaking! Which would totally not be the same on land… Nuh-Uh! (I imagine they’d go something like that. :p )
The fact that you see these in the Third Class cabins shows just how luxurious Titanic really was. Back then, many such passengers had to bring their own food and sometimes bedding. But no. Third Class passengers had a full restaurant service. Most of those people would never even have experienced that in their lives before.
I watched a documentary about a group of Irish immigrants who traveled on that fated voyage. Most of them didn't even experience having their own bed, they grow up sharing them with other members of the family. Even the mundane experience of sleeping alone in your own bed was a luxury!
@@je-freenorman7787everyone else got better rooms, different (usually better) food options, and more access to different parts of the ship, which was part of the reason why most of the passenger deaths were from third class.
You got to think how big titanic was many rooms would be damaged things flung around during the impact but this would be one’s closer to the impact the shock from the impact would be absorbed at some point along the wreck due to it sheer size
The max depth for Lobsters is around 500m, whereas titanic is around 3.8Km depth. They were caged like everyone else stuck inside the ship structure. None survived.
If you look closer at those shoes you can see they aren’t matching pairs. It’s likely they were in someone’s suitcase or stateroom, but probably not on someone’s feet.
What confused me is how some are even in pairs considered the pressure wouldn’t have allowed a single body to remain leaving the shoes to essentially “free fall”. But I’m also confused because with the whole submersible incident that just happened I now have the question of if there were folks in the ship were they still in it when it went down ? Like that couple that decided not to leave ? If someone was in a room would it preserve them and everything in the room longer due to possible air pockets and it being inside? And the air pockets would there be a possibility of air pockets as the ship sank because didn’t it like slowly fall ? Meaning it had a little bit of buoyancy?
I remember being at school when they found the titanic. I am glad somebody younger than me is continuing to research and continue detailing history like this.
I saw one interview that mentioned discovering an adult's and child's shoes near each other in one of the cabins. The bodies were gone but you know they died together.
Not the Titanic, but the Bismarck has the most haunting thing for me. If you watch James Cameron's documentary on the German Warship, you can see the remains of a Kriegsmarine Sailor still aboard inside the floatplane launcher. It's a sad sight and a reminder that these are indeed graves and deserve respect. May the ocean watch and protect her dead.
Yes for the sea will give up it's dead, on the last day the Lord will resurrect even everyone who lost their life in that ocean deep.. he knows their names he knows where they are... They will live again
The stacks of dishes, beds, and chandeliers still hanging always blows me away. The plates waiting for the next meal, the beds slept in a mere two hours before Titanic’s founder, and the chandeliers lit until the end, illuminating the horror, but also guiding souls to safety with their light. It’s hauntingly tragic, but also indescribably beautiful that even after meeting her fate, Titanic rests with the dignity and valour she was so exalted for since her inception.
It's certainly a contender, but for me it's the violin Hartley played as the ship went down. To hear that instrument making the very same sounds it made in those final moments would be one of the most spine-tingling experiences imaginable.
@@erickmack4131coursed? Homie legit stayed calm in the face of death and all out panic and choose to spend his final mins playing his beautiful music to try and bring peace to the mothers and children.
@@erickmack4131 should think it would be blessed, given it was used to provide peace in a time of horror. Though I should also think that as old as it is, it's probably best to let it rest.
The fact it was found inside its case strapped to Wallace Hartley's body, and it has an inscription that shows it was a gift from his wife, is so heartbreaking to me... in his final moments, he had the composure to store his most prized possession somewhere he thought might be safe, and strap it to his body so they'd be together, and indeed that saved the instrument
@@Dealwithit251 I am not saying it wasn't, but it has literally been proven that the engine room had a coal fire before the maiden voyage and it took a while to put out which more than likely is the reason the ship had the dark spot on the side the iceberg hit. Just saying.
@@nitsu2947nobody has been able to locate it since but it's an extremely famous image that was captured of that fleeting moment. If you search "Titanic doll head" it will come up. Just a porcelain, or something like it, doll face lying partially in sand on the ocean floor and illuminated only by the submersible lights, and James Cameron actually referenced this with a shot in the movie. I think it's basically assumed that it was covered up by sand/sea floor and retaken by nature, probably not even long after being discovered, so it's not likely to ever be seen again. At least, not in this lifetime.
I find it admirable that the stewards not only cared for he passengers comfort in all classes but were so vital to saving so many while sacrificing themselves.
chivalrous but also in a mortal situation where you are a steward and your passengers are some of the most accomplished people on earth you might also make that decision. there are people alive today who i would give my life to save because those people are, i believe, making invaluable contributions to the human condition and especially America and Americans, and I unfortunately am not.
I got to see one of the Titanic exhibitions at Foxwoods casino years ago. They had items that were recovered from the Titanic. One thing was a leather satchel, like maybe a Dr would have had. The exterior was obviously deteriorated, but the inside lining was still absolutely pristine, with the most beautiful purple silk (maybe) lining. It was quite awesome to get to see
I find it facinating that for how hard the hull hit bottom there are still artifacts in their place like somebody just placed the damn thing down there.
@@westie430 It freaked out Dr. Ballard and the crew as well, they at first thought it was a skull. But I think an expert later identified it as an expensive doll that probably belonged a a little girl in first class.
@@JoseGonzalez-il8zhno it's not it's much worse since those bombs killed pretty much everyone in a instant ww1 2 options 90% of the time your friends either die almost instantly or have to wait while they're left in nomans land cause they can't move and slowly bleed out if there lucky there sent to a place with better living areas otherwise known as a city cause of a illness other times it's much worse drowning in there own blood from gas attack its much worse seeing your friends and others dissapear within a week of fighting but considering the titanic sinking was more or less this just with out wars even being in the sinking all over again would seem like a paradise to being drafted for ww1
@@arandomsystemglitch2398I’d rather do any of those compared to titanic it may not be a gory death but titanic is a slow and mostly scary death it’s mostly the fear of being in the titanic in the dark cold ocean I’d rather be blown up or shot for sure
There was a documentary about a womans purse they found that still had intact purfume bottles. So for a monet beyond all the rot smell you got all of this foral smells. The man just broke down descibing it. It was a very good moment and really shows you that SOME people care about this tragedy. Not just using this as a tourist destination.
They are at the exhibit in Luxor las vegas very educational. You can smell them faintly behind glass box with tiny drill holes to let the smell escape. VERY NEAT!
The one artifact I had nightmares of when I was a kid ... the leather shoes. ... Aligned such that it was obvious a passenger had sunk to the bottom ... that the sea had turned the body to dust long ago ... and all that remained ... were the shoes.
The water pressure would have crushed the bodies beyond recognition so there would be nothing left to turn to dust and no human body would make it to the ocean floor intact.
@@albtckl the shoes would not have landed so perfectly aligned if the bodies disintegrated. They'd be crushed, but ligaments and sinews would hold the remains together.
If you ever get the chance to visit a Holocaust memorial with a gigantic room full of shoes, prepare to be similarly moved! Shoes tell a story of a real human being who walked in them, precisely because they don't die like we do.
Ironic that those thing's are upright considering the Titanic was heading towards the bottom at around 35mph and crashing into the sea floor according to some experts and yet something's didn't even move....that's a testament of how well built and how massive she was. Here on the Great Lakes we have amazing wrecks preserved and even a black leather boots 100yrs old or so and the color and leather is in pristine conditions...imagine if the Titanic sunk in Lk Superior..how preserved she would be.
Why? About the lake thing, is it special or something? Why would things deteriorate LESS?!? Cold? It's A LOT colder miles down then Lake Superior 🙄 deeper and colder....so I'm not sure what you mean even.
There was a section on the news recently where the showed a scan of the titanic and the pictures they used to generate it’s 3D model, in the pictures you could see hundreds of empty shoes, clothes and other belongings and unopened champagne bottles. That was really unsettling for me
I went to a museum exhibit on the titanic once. They were talking about the shoes. They found hundreds of shoes that were tied. People had been wearing them when the ship sank, and their bodies decomposed, leaving the empty shoes behind.
My great grampa was born in 1906. He didn't remember the Titanic sinking, but he had newspapers his family had gotten from when it did that he had seen and had for a while. Never knew what happened to them when he got into his twenties. Still interesting. It's so heartbreaking that they could have saved so many more people if they had used the lifeboats better or at least hadn't reduced the amount for purely asthestic reasons. 😢
It wasn't even reduced , it had an extra lifeboat load , minimum was about 12-16 , they had 20 ( 16 lifeboats , 4 collapsibles ) , but now , we have better laws and requirements.
To clarify, lifeboats were seen merely as transports for passengers between ships. The belief at the time was that there would always be some ship close enough to receive a distress signal, and make their way in time to take the passengers on the lifeboats, and then presumably send them back to get more. If I'm not mistaken, Titanic actually had _more_ lifeboats than was required... If I'm not mistaken.
They only had 20 life boats. The builders thought having more than 20 life boats would make the ship look low class. SMH. If they had more, I believe everyone would of survived. ;(
@shesomadeline yes and no. They actually did follow the laws on lifeboats, having actually more than maritime law required for a ship of her class. However, as was realised much later, it wasn't enough. White Star did do the math, and worked out how many lifeboats would be needed. They assumed, even if the ship was destined to sink, it would remain afloat long enough for rescue to arrive, and the lifeboats would be used for ferrying passengers, rather than as, well, lifeboats.
For me the most haunting image was of the porcelain doll face lying on the sand at the bottom of the ocean: a poignant, anthropomorphic representation of all of those lives lost in the disaster, as well as all of the others who are lost to the sea.
First time I've seen the word, "anthropomorphic" used so well in a sentence! The only other person I've come across who pulls off that stunt so well is me 😅! Dude who are you?
I like the giant safe...the one where the people put all their jewlery.. and when they tried to retrieve it while she was sinking. They were told they could not. And to get on a life boat..how amazing would it be to open that safe
I think what’s even more crazy is the fact that between mid 1800s to mid 1900s when they first started making these huge cruise liners the most amount of ships sank do to unforeseen circumstances the SS Atlantic smashed into rocky shores in 1873, the Britannic sunk by a naval mine as a hospital ship during WW1 in 1916, the titanic ice berg in 1912, empress of Ireland collision with another ship in foggy conditions in 1914, the Lusitania hit by a torpedo of the Ireland coast in 1915, and that’s just to name a few there was another 18 more between these time lines. To be fair this times zone was a crazy time, wars were breaking out and newer technology was being introduced but all of these ships have one thing in common. Every designer and builder made the claim that these ships were unsinkable before their maiden voyages. That to me is pretty insane that almost every ship between those two points in time were all claimed to be unsinkable and ended up at the bottom of the sea or at least under water not too long after give or take a few of them that actually had a long couple of journeys under their belts. The 19th century was a crazy time for ships that’s for sure.
Yup. that exact spot is one of many graves. You can also see black clothes, I assume suit pants or a jacket, pancaked right into the silt next to them.
@@skeemaldn5176he’s saying it’s haunting cause it’s still left in place from where it was left by the person who drank it and it didn’t fall after it sank
In that particular case, I’m 100% sure the passenger in that cabin must’ve had a glass of water or intended to drink but left it unfinished. For that glassware to stay in place and not float away despite water flooding the room. Just like dishes and glassware seen floating on the dining room sinking scenes in the movie, that jug and that glass seen in place still must’ve been full of liquid at the moment of sinking.
There was a man who had been drinking [whiskey] during the sinking, he survived. This man is known as Charles Joughin. Joughin was depicted in Roy Ward Baker's 'A Night to Remember,' (1958) Where he would get onto a capsized collapsable lifeboat, they were found and towed by another lifeboat until the Carpathia arrived, roughly 50 minutes later. 'A Night to Remember' is credited the most historically accurate, and well researched (as intended) depiction of the Titanic's sinking, including accurate communications between the Titanic, Californian, and the Carpathia, as well as all of the crew's efforts to organize and handle the situation. It's a great movie, and I'd recommend anyone watch it.
No, the worst thing to view is where their shoes were left on the bottom of the ocean floor. The shoes once had feet in them, as the shoes are where a person passed away. The body, over the years, has disintegrated. But just to see the shoes, knowing the person who passed, and now the bodies are gone. That's haunting to me.
Credits to the person who made that shelf. You’re work was so great that after 100s of years the glass is still in place. This craftsmen deserve an Oscar 👏🏻
I think the most haunting objects is the many shoes found in pairs in the debris field. As Dr. Ballard put it, it look like someone was standing there.
yeah...imagine going down to the wreck a week after and seeing white and blue corpses swinging gently in the current and out of the dark you see a face, half eaten away with a pair of glassy, lifeless eyes looking at you.
I remember reading about how during an expedition in 2003 they recovered a tea pot from one of the dining rooms… When they cleaned the silt off from it they discovered an engagement ring fused to the bottom with a finger bone still in it. They returned the kettle to where it was recovered, and they concluded that the skeletal remains of some of the titanic dead may still remain buried within the silt.
@@ryansodhi1815 The way it was written it sounded like the mud was brushed off from the outside of the pot, such that it had been laying on top of his hand when it had settled on the bottom.
for me, the most haunting object found was a pair of boots that belonged to a crew member. It was on the ocean floor right near the wreak and was discovered by Dr. Robert Ballard during his 1986 dive to the site. To think that someone's body landed on that very spot and in the course of time, the body washed away, but the boots remained.
Whoa... shudder! That is truly haunting!! I honestly don't even want to imagine what those poor doomed people- men, women, children, rich and poor alike- went through that night! My grandpa came over from Europe in the steerage class of a steamship, all by himself when he was 12 years old. And I know that that wasn't at all an uncommon practice at the time- people would send over their kids individually whenever they'd saved up enough money to buy one ticket at a time. They knew war was coming to Europe and they just wanted to send their kids somewhere safe! And the people had been told that this particular ship was "unsinkable," so I'm sure people felt so safe sending their families across the sea on such a historic vessel. This video is so heartbreakingly humanizing of all those poor souls lost forever at sea. May their memories be a blessing! 💔
From July 17, 2023: The Titanic has experienced some recent, new additions. A submersible went down to see the wreckage, but were automatically upgraded to a special "meet the passengers and crew" package. RIP OceanGate.
I remember watching a creepy pasta on the titanic and a sub got attacked by the spirits this was before ocean gate makes it more spine chilling and no am obv not saying that’s what happened just an entertaining thought
I certainly do NOT envy your job man. I probably won't be able to sleep with thoughts like that. Dunno what's more fucked up, deep dark ocean or being murdered.
The max depth for Lobsters is around 500m, whereas titanic is around 3.8Km depth. They were caged like everyone else stuck inside the ship structure. None survived.
The max depth for Lobsters is around 500m, whereas titanic is around 3.8Km depth. They were caged like everyone else stuck inside the ship structure. None survived.
Its nuts how the drinking glass survived the ship tipping at an extreme angle while sinking, the ship breaking in half, the sinking, the quick descension through the water, and the ship slamming hard into the oceanbed all without tipping over or falling off the counter. Yet i barely hit my table with my knee and my glass flips onto the floor.
@@lmc2375obviously he is just “being humorous”, it’s clearly a joke. What makes you want to try and exaggerate your intelligence in the comment section of a TH-cam short by stating the obvious, my friend?
As we can see from the open door hinges, someone actually walked through it on the very night of its sinking! How amazing to know the ship was indeed inhabited by passengers
thats actually incredible since the titanic hit the sea floor at 35 knots can you imagine hitting a wall at 40 MPH the bow hit the sea floor and bent, the mud must have been very deep to slow all that metal down, they even said after the titanic hit the bottom the wake of the sinking ship also his with great force on the sunken ship
Boffins reckon lobsters are capable of immortality because they haven't got some genetic thing that limits the number of times cells can form. Or renew or some such thing. You can tell my biology teacher didn't want me in her class.
@@chrisparkes2179I've heard this. Lobsters express telomerase throughout their entire life in all tissues unlike most animals, better preserving their telomeres and thereby allowing DNA replication to occur with fewer errors over time. So, instead of dying of cancer, they normally die of exhaustion which suggests that the mechanism of death is metabolic.
The max depth for Lobsters is around 500m, whereas titanic is around 3.8Km depth. They were caged like everyone else stuck inside the ship structure. None survived.
Yeah probably the *most* haunting artifacts found were the pairs of shoes that used to have people in them, until the sea dissolved their bodies into dust
That’s not how it works it’s complicated idk how to properly explain it but from my understanding it’s on inclosed objects with trapped air inside that burst cause the waters pushing in on it but if the water can get in it doesn’t effect it I think weight matters aswell
One thing I personally think would be SUPER COOL is if when we die....if wherever we go....we could actually sit down and watch a LIVE VIDEO of whichever crazy, traumatic, life changing event we wanted to....but we'd get to watch it play out in REAL TIME.
There are only two places to go when we die. Heaven or hell. The Bible says that if you believe you are a sinner, that Jesus died for your sins and He rose again 3 days later that you will have eternal life. Jesus loves you and I hope this message finds you well ❤
I saw the “Titanic” exhibit in Vegas a few years ago and there were several displays of things that were arranged exactly as they had been found. Every piece had a picture taken at the time of its discovery. The dish rack, still full of dishes, was probably to craziest. Sooo many fragile things survived the sinking intact and oftentimes still arranged as they had been before the ship went down. It was bizarre.
In the A&E Titanic documentary they were recording the debris field and came across a set of boots as if there was someone wearing them and drowned sinking to the bottom, decaying away leaving the boots in place.
@@mywifesboyfriend5558 If we were talking about the crew of the Titan, that would be true. However, if an original Titanic victim drowned they would have no buoyancy to stay at the surface and sink. As the pressure increased the gasses in the body would compress and sink even further to the bottom. Essentially, all the gasses in their body would be squeezed out and replaced with the same pressure as the surrounding water. The body would still be intact until the sea and its critters had its way with the body, leaving only the boots because the tanning is resistant to microscopic organisms.
"Probably had a sip of water from this very glass..."🙄🤦🏾♂️ Just like they were PROBABLY in that room the VERY night the vessel sunk. And they PROBABLY sat on a chair or laid in their bed that VERY night. Their hand also PROBABLY opened the door by touching the VERY DOORKNOB to open it. 🙄🙄🤦🏾♂️
I find it interesting that so many people do not read comments. If they did they would stop saying the glass is full of water to this day. It's funny once, not 50+ times over. I find the same thing on that useless Nextdoor app. Everybody saying the same junk but nobody is listening
For me the pocket watch that stopped at the exact time of the sinking is the most chilling object which they retrieved from the Titanic.
A member of the ship’s staff that survived by jumping into the ocean and rescued by a lifeboat displayed his pocket watch in an interview and the time had frozen at 2:20am. Edit: The staff member was Frank Prentice, an assistant purser. His 1979 interview is on TH-cam.
@@BeckVMHthat's so eerie! The same happened with a clock discovered in the rubble from one of the Twin Towers from 9/11. The clock was still at the time of when the plane hit the tower.
@@PennyKloterBush did 9/11
@@BeckVMH takes “a moment in time” to a whole new level. 😅
@@BeckVMHhis best friend also jumped with him but got hit by a part of the ship and was severely injured, prentice stayed with him till he died and then got to a lifeboat after his friend died
Whoever designed the wooden rails on that thing clearly did a damn good job.
Most furniture, even for the poorest people was well made back then. It's only since the second world war has thet been a demand for cheaply made furniture that can be discarded when the owner gets bored of it.
@@chrisparkes2179the sad idea of sacrificing quality for quantity.
@@LordThomasPassion the profit model has been a disaster for the human race
@@DumbAsh00 people do have to eat.
@@LordThomasPassion so? Socialism will feed. The Soviet union was eating better than the united states' at its peak
Probably the most memorable Titanic artifact uncovered for me was a violin of one of the band members with a memento and signature from his fiancee engraved into it
Yes. 😢
Imagine how valuable that violin is. I bet it plays, or played, beautifully.
That violin was eventually returned either to his family or fiancée- can’t remember which. I saw a segment on it in a documentary.
It is an amazing photo when you think that not only did it survive the sinking. It also survived the bow slamming into the ocean bottom at about 30 knots.
Makes me wonder about all those illustrations I saw as a kid showing that the bow sank to the bottom basically pointing straight down, twisting in a spiral the whole way.
It had to have been mostly level the whole time.
@@christianpetterson1784 Yes,
they tested in a pool with a model of the bow section of the ship how it would have sank and it went down in a falling leaf type patern every time, going forward stalling then back again then forward. I've heard people argue since then that they got it wrong but that's how I believe it went down, in a rocking motion.
@@paulanthony5274makes sense👍
@@christianpetterson1784 Gs would've been keeping it in place probably. You see videos of it online like that fighter pilot pouring water while upside down.
It was the bow went down spiraling like a paper plane, the stern went down backwards and forwards like a leaf
Crazy part is that glass is still full of water to this day.
Amazing isn't it?
Did the lobsters getting a second lease on life not want any in to the hacky titanic jokes that are on repeat in comment sections?
get the hell outta here rofl 😂
I fucking knew someone would make this ancient joke
How original. COMEDIC GENIUS..
It still blows my mind that dishes and glasses and window panes actually survived the sinking under the immense pressure
Pressure is generally only a problem if there’s a difference (assuming the new boiling and melting points aren’t issues, a problem glass doesn’t have).
The water on the outside of the glass is pushing in with dozens of pounds of force, but the water inside is doing the same thing, causing it to equalize. It’s intact for the same reason the drinking glasses in your kitchen are.
Yup he's right.
The glasses in your kitchen are under almost 15 psi from the atmosphere. But it's equal on all sides so it's not stressed
And that's how CoNsPiRaCiEs start..
@@sirsancti5504Titanic engineers introduced sEcReT aLiEn TeChNoLoGy to keep glasses from breaking! Which would totally not be the same on land… Nuh-Uh!
(I imagine they’d go something like that. :p )
Odds are you are american.
The fact that you see these in the Third Class cabins shows just how luxurious Titanic really was. Back then, many such passengers had to bring their own food and sometimes bedding.
But no. Third Class passengers had a full restaurant service. Most of those people would never even have experienced that in their lives before.
I watched a documentary about a group of Irish immigrants who traveled on that fated voyage. Most of them didn't even experience having their own bed, they grow up sharing them with other members of the family. Even the mundane experience of sleeping alone in your own bed was a luxury!
what did everyone else get?
@@je-freenorman7787everyone else got better rooms, different (usually better) food options, and more access to different parts of the ship, which was part of the reason why most of the passenger deaths were from third class.
Just like carnival cruise ships 😂, 900quids for 5 nights in a pitch black no window cabins.
@@awfulbubble while they all steal from the poor. Making America great again
It’s astonishing that from how hard the ship hit the ocean floor that anything could remained in place like that.
just shows you how well those things were designed to keep things in place I guess.
Maybe she didn't hit the bottom as hard as we think? I mean I imagine she was hauling ass but stuff like this makes me wonder.
@@oglo2011 the bow was going at 35mph straight down, the stern was spiralling at about 50mph
You got to think how big titanic was many rooms would be damaged things flung around during the impact but this would be one’s closer to the impact the shock from the impact would be absorbed at some point along the wreck due to it sheer size
@@Talon18136what impact? Many survivors claimed they didn't feel the ship hit the iceberg
The lobsters that were planned for dinner must have thought the the sinking was a miracle.
The max depth for Lobsters is around 500m, whereas titanic is around 3.8Km depth. They were caged like everyone else stuck inside the ship structure. None survived.
@@e.w3935here comes the fun police
😂
Well damn
Dam
The pairs of shoes found together was the most haunting to me because where those were found in pairs once had bodies in them when it sank
If you look closer at those shoes you can see they aren’t matching pairs. It’s likely they were in someone’s suitcase or stateroom, but probably not on someone’s feet.
@@piratesswoop725they were on someone’s feet after the bodies got crushed
@@daintydalmatian But likely not the same person's feet, considering they are two different types of shoe.
What confused me is how some are even in pairs considered the pressure wouldn’t have allowed a single body to remain leaving the shoes to essentially “free fall”. But I’m also confused because with the whole submersible incident that just happened I now have the question of if there were folks in the ship were they still in it when it went down ? Like that couple that decided not to leave ? If someone was in a room would it preserve them and everything in the room longer due to possible air pockets and it being inside? And the air pockets would there be a possibility of air pockets as the ship sank because didn’t it like slowly fall ? Meaning it had a little bit of buoyancy?
@@daintydalmatianis that even possible ? If your crushed at that depth outside like just in the water would there even be anything left ?
Passenger:”golly I sure could use some water right now.”
Iceberg:”funny you should mention that…”
That ain’t right 💀
Ooooh that's dark 😂
damn 😂💀💀
He got a lifetimes supply worth
Oh, that's cold. 🥶
I remember being at school when they found the titanic. I am glad somebody younger than me is continuing to research and continue detailing history like this.
@@brandonblake320 The wreck wasn't found in 1912, you know.
I saw one interview that mentioned discovering an adult's and child's shoes near each other in one of the cabins. The bodies were gone but you know they died together.
I just saw that one the other day. Heartwrenching!!! 😢💔😔
😢❤
That’s awful. Ughhhh
Not the Titanic, but the Bismarck has the most haunting thing for me. If you watch James Cameron's documentary on the German Warship, you can see the remains of a Kriegsmarine Sailor still aboard inside the floatplane launcher. It's a sad sight and a reminder that these are indeed graves and deserve respect. May the ocean watch and protect her dead.
Rest on Paradise to all who departed that fateful day 💚
On the Bismarck? NAZI war criminals.
Seafood
Yes for the sea will give up it's dead, on the last day the Lord will resurrect even everyone who lost their life in that ocean deep.. he knows their names he knows where they are... They will live again
The oceans a killer
The stacks of dishes, beds, and chandeliers still hanging always blows me away. The plates waiting for the next meal, the beds slept in a mere two hours before Titanic’s founder, and the chandeliers lit until the end, illuminating the horror, but also guiding souls to safety with their light. It’s hauntingly tragic, but also indescribably beautiful that even after meeting her fate, Titanic rests with the dignity and valour she was so exalted for since her inception.
You should write stories. You have good vocabulary and visually inducing words. Kudos 🎉
i dont think titanic had any chandeliers. ???
It's certainly a contender, but for me it's the violin Hartley played as the ship went down. To hear that instrument making the very same sounds it made in those final moments would be one of the most spine-tingling experiences imaginable.
It’s cursed, please don’t wish that
@@erickmack4131coursed? Homie legit stayed calm in the face of death and all out panic and choose to spend his final mins playing his beautiful music to try and bring peace to the mothers and children.
@@shawnmayle4512 that person's referring to the instrument, as in the instrument being now haunted/cursed
@@erickmack4131 should think it would be blessed, given it was used to provide peace in a time of horror.
Though I should also think that as old as it is, it's probably best to let it rest.
The fact it was found inside its case strapped to Wallace Hartley's body, and it has an inscription that shows it was a gift from his wife, is so heartbreaking to me... in his final moments, he had the composure to store his most prized possession somewhere he thought might be safe, and strap it to his body so they'd be together, and indeed that saved the instrument
Everything about the Titanic is incredibly sad 😔
And intriguing if you ever wonder what exactly made it sink.
@@Dealwithit251 I am not saying it wasn't, but it has literally been proven that the engine room had a coal fire before the maiden voyage and it took a while to put out which more than likely is the reason the ship had the dark spot on the side the iceberg hit. Just saying.
And funny as well
Death is so sad
@@Dealwithit251 operator error*
Passenger in 1912: "I should have a sip of water."
2024: *_gets chills_*
The bisque doll's head that was found near the wreck was pretty haunting in itself.
Where ??
@@nitsu2947 th-cam.com/video/WkCF0s-mq30/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=OceanlinerDesigns
@@nitsu2947nobody has been able to locate it since but it's an extremely famous image that was captured of that fleeting moment.
If you search "Titanic doll head" it will come up. Just a porcelain, or something like it, doll face lying partially in sand on the ocean floor and illuminated only by the submersible lights, and James Cameron actually referenced this with a shot in the movie.
I think it's basically assumed that it was covered up by sand/sea floor and retaken by nature, probably not even long after being discovered, so it's not likely to ever be seen again. At least, not in this lifetime.
Thought that was a pretty cool image too since I am a doll collector
@@islandboy4445I believe it was sold at auction.
I find it admirable that the stewards not only cared for he passengers comfort in all classes but were so vital to saving so many while sacrificing themselves.
It definitely was a different time, chivalry was not dead
chivalrous but also in a mortal situation where you are a steward and your passengers are some of the most accomplished people on earth you might also make that decision. there are people alive today who i would give my life to save because those people are, i believe, making invaluable contributions to the human condition and especially America and Americans, and I unfortunately am not.
@@janetstrothman8087 women killed it.
@@raydafuq3570 Males who were not held accountable by men got away with it.
I got to see one of the Titanic exhibitions at Foxwoods casino years ago. They had items that were recovered from the Titanic. One thing was a leather satchel, like maybe a Dr would have had. The exterior was obviously deteriorated, but the inside lining was still absolutely pristine, with the most beautiful purple silk (maybe) lining. It was quite awesome to get to see
I find it facinating that for how hard the hull hit bottom there are still artifacts in their place like somebody just placed the damn thing down there.
Right? I think that all the time and here I am at 36 years old still accidentally knocking glasses off the table
It didn't hit hard. It just floated down.
@@zafmo9829 thats a 30 ton bow. There is no floating down.
@@jaredhammonds8255 doesn't matter. The pressure is immense as you get deeper. It slowed it down
@@zafmo9829it hit the sea floor at 35 mph…
The ceramic doll head was a more poignant reminded of those who died. It was a child's toy.
To me that's a MILLION times more haunting than a water glass.
OMG that was my first thought too. That creepy little bright white face in the pitch black still freaks me out😮
@@westie430 It freaked out Dr. Ballard and the crew as well, they at first thought it was a skull. But I think an expert later identified it as an expensive doll that probably belonged a a little girl in first class.
@@Jeff98177 I remember hearing that! I can't even imagine what that was like. Pitch black and then a little white face. 😬 I would have left my body🤣
@@westie430 I bet they felt like waste products were about to leave their bodies!
Just found out that I had an ancester on titanic, a fireman/stoker named Thomas Russell Kerr. He died in the sinking.
Title: MOST HAUNTING OBJECT ON THE TITANIC
Video: someone almost definitely drank water from a glass
Seriously 😅
Yeah does not compute
True. I thought there was some really creepy story behind the picture, but it was just that someone used the cup before the Titanic sank.
i wouldn't say most haunting
“Here we have Hogwart’s most haunted toilet, because moaning Myrtle once used it.”
Imagine surviving this shit show and then getting drafted for WW1.
Is it as bad as the guy who witnessed two nuclear bombs in Japan? Idk which scenario is worse
Boarding the Lusitania, even. 😂😢
@@JoseGonzalez-il8zhno it's not it's much worse since those bombs killed pretty much everyone in a instant ww1 2 options 90% of the time your friends either die almost instantly or have to wait while they're left in nomans land cause they can't move and slowly bleed out if there lucky there sent to a place with better living areas otherwise known as a city cause of a illness other times it's much worse drowning in there own blood from gas attack its much worse seeing your friends and others dissapear within a week of fighting but considering the titanic sinking was more or less this just with out wars even being in the sinking all over again would seem like a paradise to being drafted for ww1
Imagine being Hitler
@@arandomsystemglitch2398I’d rather do any of those compared to titanic it may not be a gory death but titanic is a slow and mostly scary death it’s mostly the fear of being in the titanic in the dark cold ocean I’d rather be blown up or shot for sure
The doll’s face is so chilling to me. A little girl played with it, and it makes me think of the many children that died.
There was a documentary about a womans purse they found that still had intact purfume bottles. So for a monet beyond all the rot smell you got all of this foral smells. The man just broke down descibing it. It was a very good moment and really shows you that SOME people care about this tragedy. Not just using this as a tourist destination.
😂
They are at the exhibit in Luxor las vegas very educational. You can smell them faintly behind glass box with tiny drill holes to let the smell escape. VERY NEAT!
how the hell do you smell under water?
@@mishterkhalid3117FFS. Lol. They brought them back up, they are now in a museum exhibit at the luxor along with many other exhibits.
I think you had some typos there, so I’m not quite sure what you said above
The one artifact I had nightmares of when I was a kid ... the leather shoes. ... Aligned such that it was obvious a passenger had sunk to the bottom ... that the sea had turned the body to dust long ago ... and all that remained ... were the shoes.
That's what I thought he'd go for! I bet that glass got flipped and settled down heavy end first and wasn't even drunk out of 😂
The water pressure would have crushed the bodies beyond recognition so there would be nothing left to turn to dust and no human body would make it to the ocean floor intact.
@@albtckl true. Far too moist for dust… 😂
@@albtckl the shoes would not have landed so perfectly aligned if the bodies disintegrated. They'd be crushed, but ligaments and sinews would hold the remains together.
If you ever get the chance to visit a Holocaust memorial with a gigantic room full of shoes, prepare to be similarly moved! Shoes tell a story of a real human being who walked in them, precisely because they don't die like we do.
The baby shoes scattered on the ocean floor were the most haunting things to me
😢
Ironic that those thing's are upright considering the Titanic was heading towards the bottom at around 35mph and crashing into the sea floor according to some experts and yet something's didn't even move....that's a testament of how well built and how massive she was.
Here on the Great Lakes we have amazing wrecks preserved and even a black leather boots 100yrs old or so and the color and leather is in pristine conditions...imagine if the Titanic sunk in Lk Superior..how preserved she would be.
I was thinking about that, too. I imagine the cabin being filled with water deadened the blow when she hit the ocean floor.
Why? About the lake thing, is it special or something? Why would things deteriorate LESS?!? Cold? It's A LOT colder miles down then Lake Superior 🙄 deeper and colder....so I'm not sure what you mean even.
FWIW the Great Lakes are freshwater, not salt, and don't host the variety of life that eat away at shipwrecks.
@@6Haunted-Days The salt......use your brain
@@6Haunted-Daysummm…salt water ? Have you ever driven a car in the east coast? The roads they salt literally rusts the entire underside. Damaging af
There was a section on the news recently where the showed a scan of the titanic and the pictures they used to generate it’s 3D model, in the pictures you could see hundreds of empty shoes, clothes and other belongings and unopened champagne bottles. That was really unsettling for me
I went to a museum exhibit on the titanic once. They were talking about the shoes. They found hundreds of shoes that were tied. People had been wearing them when the ship sank, and their bodies decomposed, leaving the empty shoes behind.
Do you have the link?
@@allisonsonnier3156Look up Titanic Wreck Cabins and Hallways.
@@99brooklynnn what kind of a sociopath takes their shoes off, and then re-ties them?
Ikr, all that champagne...🥂🍾
My great grampa was born in 1906. He didn't remember the Titanic sinking, but he had newspapers his family had gotten from when it did that he had seen and had for a while. Never knew what happened to them when he got into his twenties. Still interesting. It's so heartbreaking that they could have saved so many more people if they had used the lifeboats better or at least hadn't reduced the amount for purely asthestic reasons. 😢
It wasn't even reduced , it had an extra lifeboat load , minimum was about 12-16 , they had 20 ( 16 lifeboats , 4 collapsibles ) , but now , we have better laws and requirements.
To clarify, lifeboats were seen merely as transports for passengers between ships. The belief at the time was that there would always be some ship close enough to receive a distress signal, and make their way in time to take the passengers on the lifeboats, and then presumably send them back to get more. If I'm not mistaken, Titanic actually had _more_ lifeboats than was required... If I'm not mistaken.
@soundwavesuperior7522 you are not mistaken.
They only had 20 life boats. The builders thought having more than 20 life boats would make the ship look low class. SMH.
If they had more, I believe everyone would of survived. ;(
@shesomadeline yes and no. They actually did follow the laws on lifeboats, having actually more than maritime law required for a ship of her class. However, as was realised much later, it wasn't enough. White Star did do the math, and worked out how many lifeboats would be needed. They assumed, even if the ship was destined to sink, it would remain afloat long enough for rescue to arrive, and the lifeboats would be used for ferrying passengers, rather than as, well, lifeboats.
For me the most haunting image was of the porcelain doll face lying on the sand at the bottom of the ocean: a poignant, anthropomorphic representation of all of those lives lost in the disaster, as well as all of the others who are lost to the sea.
First time I've seen the word, "anthropomorphic" used so well in a sentence! The only other person I've come across who pulls off that stunt so well is me 😅!
Dude who are you?
Why is it representative?
I like the giant safe...the one where the people put all their jewlery.. and when they tried to retrieve it while she was sinking. They were told they could not. And to get on a life boat..how amazing would it be to open that safe
Odds are the saltwater rusted the safe to the point there probably isn't anything in there now.
They probably did open the safe already,, probably what all the recon missions are about
I think what’s even more crazy is the fact that between mid 1800s to mid 1900s when they first started making these huge cruise liners the most amount of ships sank do to unforeseen circumstances the SS Atlantic smashed into rocky shores in 1873, the Britannic sunk by a naval mine as a hospital ship during WW1 in 1916, the titanic ice berg in 1912, empress of Ireland collision with another ship in foggy conditions in 1914, the Lusitania hit by a torpedo of the Ireland coast in 1915, and that’s just to name a few there was another 18 more between these time lines.
To be fair this times zone was a crazy time, wars were breaking out and newer technology was being introduced but all of these ships have one thing in common. Every designer and builder made the claim that these ships were unsinkable before their maiden voyages.
That to me is pretty insane that almost every ship between those two points in time were all claimed to be unsinkable and ended up at the bottom of the sea or at least under water not too long after give or take a few of them that actually had a long couple of journeys under their belts.
The 19th century was a crazy time for ships that’s for sure.
Pretty sure that the most haunted thing on that ship is the shoes. The corpse and skeleton got decomposed but the shoes stay where they are.
No
Yea this short is stupid how is a water glass haunting so what man had a glass of water before he died jesus
Yup. that exact spot is one of many graves. You can also see black clothes, I assume suit pants or a jacket, pancaked right into the silt next to them.
@@skeemaldn5176he’s saying it’s haunting cause it’s still left in place from where it was left by the person who drank it and it didn’t fall after it sank
Umm the water pressure would have crushed the bodies beyond recognition so there would be nothing left to "decompose".
In that particular case, I’m 100% sure the passenger in that cabin must’ve had a glass of water or intended to drink but left it unfinished. For that glassware to stay in place and not float away despite water flooding the room. Just like dishes and glassware seen floating on the dining room sinking scenes in the movie, that jug and that glass seen in place still must’ve been full of liquid at the moment of sinking.
But not full of the same water as salt water is more dense than fresh water. That and it's also been at the bottom of the ocean for 111 years
@@kentgriffiths6288well deduced!
@@kentgriffiths6288lol
Shouldn’t it be floating??🤔
@@lilswtangel92what
God imagine waking up and giving yourself a free trial of what's about to happen that day
I still stand by this joke
@@organicrobot6425 my man
The most chilling object now is the Logitech Controller sitting close by to the titanic.
It’s not there they removed all of the titan debris.
@jesalyn84 yea the controller imploded as well. Anything that was inside that cabin was immediately turned into soup.
There was a man who had been drinking [whiskey] during the sinking, he survived. This man is known as Charles Joughin.
Joughin was depicted in Roy Ward Baker's 'A Night to Remember,' (1958) Where he would get onto a capsized collapsable lifeboat, they were found and towed by another lifeboat until the Carpathia arrived, roughly 50 minutes later.
'A Night to Remember' is credited the most historically accurate, and well researched (as intended) depiction of the Titanic's sinking, including accurate communications between the Titanic, Californian, and the Carpathia, as well as all of the crew's efforts to organize and handle the situation. It's a great movie, and I'd recommend anyone watch it.
He said he was in the pantry in the break up zone when he heard the Titanic's beams snapping. That must have been horrifying.
@@GemmaLB Probably scary to think of afterword, but keep in mind, this dude is probably drunk out of his mind at the moment this is happening.
@@marktwain3531 He probably was, he made it his goal to save as much alcohol as possible after all!
@@marktwain3531He was. That’s why he was in the pantry 😂.
One thing about history is that no matter how interesting topics can be, it gets to the point where there is little to no new information.
No, the worst thing to view is where their shoes were left on the bottom of the ocean floor. The shoes once had feet in them, as the shoes are where a person passed away. The body, over the years, has disintegrated. But just to see the shoes, knowing the person who passed, and now the bodies are gone. That's haunting to me.
Credits to the person who made that shelf. You’re work was so great that after 100s of years the glass is still in place. This craftsmen deserve an Oscar 👏🏻
They give Oscar's to craftsmen?
@@jaredhammonds8255 They sure do
@@jaredhammonds8255They better
You mean deserves an "award" not Oscar... why does every kid think those words are interchangeable?
Yessss. I need this brand's NAME. 😂
I think the most haunting objects is the many shoes found in pairs in the debris field.
As Dr. Ballard put it, it look like someone was standing there.
yeah...imagine going down to the wreck a week after and seeing white and blue corpses swinging gently in the current and out of the dark you see a face, half eaten away with a pair of glassy, lifeless eyes looking at you.
@@christophercassidy9962 and that’s enough of this post
Some dude drank water, terrifying
If only there was a submersible we could go down there and see these things for ourselves…
I bet it could be made on a budget. Like sealed from the outside and controlled by an Xbox controller perhaps
@@thatoneguy7781 ~ That'd be awesome! A to-die-for revolutionary marvel!!!
The submersible that can not only give you the tour of the wreckage but also bring you to meet the crew & the passangers.
Y'all fucked up.😂😂😂😂
lol😂 wow yall know this youtube bullshit comment game very well
I like how humans universally accept a upside down glass means is clean and unused
It’s honestly so easy to forget the titanic is actually a massive grave
I saw the Titanic exhibit and you couldn't help but be moved by the personal artifacts.
I did too. It was pretty incredible. I's one thing to watch a video, another entirely to touch an artifact yourself.
I remember reading about how during an expedition in 2003 they recovered a tea pot from one of the dining rooms…
When they cleaned the silt off from it they discovered an engagement ring fused to the bottom with a finger bone still in it. They returned the kettle to where it was recovered, and they concluded that the skeletal remains of some of the titanic dead may still remain buried within the silt.
Damn i never heard that before!
They returned the kettle (and kept the ring). Talk about giving someone the finger.
So do you think, when the ship was sinking the person had put his hand inside the tea pot?
@@ryansodhi1815Maybe it smashed to one of the dead bodies
@@ryansodhi1815 The way it was written it sounded like the mud was brushed off from the outside of the pot, such that it had been laying on top of his hand when it had settled on the bottom.
for me, the most haunting object found was a pair of boots that belonged to a crew member. It was on the ocean floor right near the wreak and was discovered by Dr. Robert Ballard during his 1986 dive to the site. To think that someone's body landed on that very spot and in the course of time, the body washed away, but the boots remained.
Whoa... shudder! That is truly haunting!!
I honestly don't even want to imagine what those poor doomed people- men, women, children, rich and poor alike- went through that night! My grandpa came over from Europe in the steerage class of a steamship, all by himself when he was 12 years old. And I know that that wasn't at all an uncommon practice at the time- people would send over their kids individually whenever they'd saved up enough money to buy one ticket at a time. They knew war was coming to Europe and they just wanted to send their kids somewhere safe! And the people had been told that this particular ship was "unsinkable," so I'm sure people felt so safe sending their families across the sea on such a historic vessel. This video is so heartbreakingly humanizing of all those poor souls lost forever at sea.
May their memories be a blessing! 💔
From July 17, 2023: The Titanic has experienced some recent, new additions. A submersible went down to see the wreckage, but were automatically upgraded to a special "meet the passengers and crew" package. RIP OceanGate.
As spooky as that sounds....very true😢😢😢
I remember watching a creepy pasta on the titanic and a sub got attacked by the spirits this was before ocean gate makes it more spine chilling and no am obv not saying that’s what happened just an entertaining thought
Okay that was funny asf
passenger: *drinks water*
modernity: "how horrifying."
As a detective, I often go into houses where people were murdered and think to myself, they probably had a sip of water today
I certainly do NOT envy your job man. I probably won't be able to sleep with thoughts like that. Dunno what's more fucked up, deep dark ocean or being murdered.
You're kidding right! The most haunting object has got to be the shoes that had the bodies decompose from them leaving them where the people died.
Wow.. a passenger had something to drink on that day.. really haunting
Nothing more haunting than a person taking a sip of water. I remember seeing a guy sipping water & it haunts tf outta me til this day
Duuude the way I cackled at this😭
@@tarah._. 😂😂😂
lobster escaping titanic: *FREEDOM!*
Cold freezing water: well yes... *BUT ACTUALLY NO*
The max depth for Lobsters is around 500m, whereas titanic is around 3.8Km depth. They were caged like everyone else stuck inside the ship structure. None survived.
The max depth for Lobsters is around 500m, whereas titanic is around 3.8Km depth. They were caged like everyone else stuck inside the ship structure. None survived.
Person on the Titanic: hurry! It’s sinking!
This person: I’d rather drink my water. Have a good one!
What's even more amazing is that the glass is *still* filled with water!
The most devastating part of the Titanic catastrophe was the fact that most lost souls could have been put into the lifeboats😢
Craziest thing is that that jugs still full of water
The iceberg was kind enough to give them a refill.
They paid in full for the services inside the ship & a little outside the ship as well.
Hey, like the lady from Titanic 1997 said: "Hey sonny! How about a little ice?"
Its nuts how the drinking glass survived the ship tipping at an extreme angle while sinking, the ship breaking in half, the sinking, the quick descension through the water, and the ship slamming hard into the oceanbed all without tipping over or falling off the counter.
Yet i barely hit my table with my knee and my glass flips onto the floor.
The most haunting image is that of the ghostly porcelain doll head which looks like a dead child under the cold, dark depths of the Titanic wreckage.
Crazy how that glass still has water in it
💀
Much like the water that's left running at Capt. Smith's bathtub 🛁
Crazy how? Or were you just being humorous? It would have to be full, it's submerged under water.
@@lmc2375obviously he is just “being humorous”, it’s clearly a joke. What makes you want to try and exaggerate your intelligence in the comment section of a TH-cam short by stating the obvious, my friend?
Legend says that the cup still has water in it to this day! Spooky...
Wowwwww
Very original joke.
@@4thtime910yes I’m sure every joke you tell is just as original too. Let people enjoy themselves and don’t be such an ass, will ya?
@@user-fo6tk1dw2lor water on the brain
@@user-fo6tk1dw2lL old person.
As we can see from the open door hinges, someone actually walked through it on the very night of its sinking! How amazing to know the ship was indeed inhabited by passengers
The most haunting object at the wreck now is a Logitech F710 wireless Gamepad controller.
And a Rubik's cube
And my dead wife
What is the most haunting part of it all, is that the pool of the gym is still full of water… unbelievable
I'm putting my money on "Spirits wanted to have a glass of water ready for its new guests... to share."
💀
The ship didn't do its job but that water vase sure did. 😂
Someone should tell the passenger that his cup is overflowing now.
To me the most horrific artifacts are the boots side by side with each other. Really emphasizes the wreck is a grave site and people died there.
Yup the most haunting thing, a joystick
That joystick was magical dude. It made a real-time meeting happen with the original crew & passangers of the ship
I think w the submersible w a .. game controller 🎮 4 operation....if I still has my super NES ....I'd not play iT again .....😢😢😢😢😵💫✌️
1 thing is for sure, that glass an pitcher will remain full of water until the oceans dry up
That little rail did its job
thats actually incredible since the titanic hit the sea floor at 35 knots can you imagine hitting a wall at 40 MPH the bow hit the sea floor and bent, the mud must have been very deep to slow all that metal down, they even said after the titanic hit the bottom the wake of the sinking ship also his with great force on the sunken ship
Wow, lots of people used obects on the night of the sinking that's still down there. Great deduction
Legend says, the lobsters which they were going get cooked are now the passengers of the ship, enjoying the voyage.
Boffins reckon lobsters are capable of immortality because they haven't got some genetic thing that limits the number of times cells can form. Or renew or some such thing.
You can tell my biology teacher didn't want me in her class.
Legends say that there is a 113 year old lobster in the bow of the ship waiting for the ship to carry it to New york to wreak havoc
@@chrisparkes2179I've heard this. Lobsters express telomerase throughout their entire life in all tissues unlike most animals, better preserving their telomeres and thereby allowing DNA replication to occur with fewer errors over time. So, instead of dying of cancer, they normally die of exhaustion which suggests that the mechanism of death is metabolic.
The max depth for Lobsters is around 500m, whereas titanic is around 3.8Km depth. They were caged like everyone else stuck inside the ship structure. None survived.
@@e.w3935 - Lobsters can live underwater. Also, maybe the cages got broken ? We don't know. But I bet they survived.
Darn, that is haunting
Yeah probably the *most* haunting artifacts found were the pairs of shoes that used to have people in them, until the sea dissolved their bodies into dust
Well, I guess technically mud lol
That damn glass can withstand that pressure😂
That’s not how it works it’s complicated idk how to properly explain it but from my understanding it’s on inclosed objects with trapped air inside that burst cause the waters pushing in on it but if the water can get in it doesn’t effect it I think weight matters aswell
One thing I personally think would be SUPER COOL is if when we die....if wherever we go....we could actually sit down and watch a LIVE VIDEO of whichever crazy, traumatic, life changing event we wanted to....but we'd get to watch it play out in REAL TIME.
There are only two places to go when we die. Heaven or hell. The Bible says that if you believe you are a sinner, that Jesus died for your sins and He rose again 3 days later that you will have eternal life. Jesus loves you and I hope this message finds you well ❤
I saw the “Titanic” exhibit in Vegas a few years ago and there were several displays of things that were arranged exactly as they had been found. Every piece had a picture taken at the time of its discovery. The dish rack, still full of dishes, was probably to craziest. Sooo many fragile things survived the sinking intact and oftentimes still arranged as they had been before the ship went down. It was bizarre.
In the A&E Titanic documentary they were recording the debris field and came across a set of boots as if there was someone wearing them and drowned sinking to the bottom, decaying away leaving the boots in place.
Well, they didn't decay, they imploded.
@@mywifesboyfriend5558 If we were talking about the crew of the Titan, that would be true.
However, if an original Titanic victim drowned they would have no buoyancy to stay at the surface and sink. As the pressure increased the gasses in the body would compress and sink even further to the bottom. Essentially, all the gasses in their body would be squeezed out and replaced with the same pressure as the surrounding water. The body would still be intact until the sea and its critters had its way with the body, leaving only the boots because the tanning is resistant to microscopic organisms.
@@mywifesboyfriend5558 POV: you just earned a physics degree from Google
Goodness me, that is terrifingly haunting
*sarcasm intensified*
Someone drank water, yes very haunting indeed.
Great video, I love your content, I'm a HUGE Titanic enthusiast, a Titanic nerd 😂 thanks for doing what you do, keep up the great work 🙏🏼🚢
Crazy how the water jug withstood more pressure than the Titan submersible.
He had a sip of water aight
That wooden rail did a better job than the ship at doing its job and staying together
"Probably had a sip of water from this very glass..."🙄🤦🏾♂️
Just like they were PROBABLY in that room the VERY night the vessel sunk. And they PROBABLY sat on a chair or laid in their bed that VERY night. Their hand also PROBABLY opened the door by touching the VERY DOORKNOB to open it. 🙄🙄🤦🏾♂️
L
Crazy how a person once drank from this glass right
I find it interesting that so many people do not read comments. If they did they would stop saying the glass is full of water to this day. It's funny once, not 50+ times over. I find the same thing on that useless Nextdoor app. Everybody saying the same junk but nobody is listening
Next door is actually really cool
How did you turn anger about a repeating comment into anger about an unrelated app
Friend i think maybe the issue is your own attitude
@@Kalterkard How did my comment get 20 likes Sparkey?
@@jacktorrance9781 Really? Someone posting a picture of a snake and idiots still guessing what it is 3 weeks later is pretty lame to me
Would it be smarter if they said let's rebuild the Olympic class instead of just saying let's rebuild Titanic
well someone tried blue star line but cancelled
They should recreate the ship as a hotel. Just don't burn it down like the Olympic.
@@Dominian1yes
Dear Mr. Brady.. If they didn't have water in the middle of the night how did they do it??
Fun fact: there's 100 year old water in that cup and jug.
There’s only salt water in the cup and unless the jug has a tight fitting lid, it also has salt water in it.
Legend has it that the passenger was a glass half-empty kind of person, but after the Titanic sank…