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For those unfamiliar with why Titan failed, Mark Monroe’s Netflix documentary “Titan: The OceanGate Disaster” provides a solid overview of what led to the submersible’s implosion.
Coast Guard marine safety engineers assigned to the Marine Safety Center in Washington D.C., working for the Marine Board of Investigation for the Titan submersible case, conduct a survey of the ...
Titan sub hearings enter its final day as OceanGate ex-employee testifies CEO would ‘buy a congressman’: Latest news . US Coast Guard’s two-week long hearing into the disastrous Titan ...
Hearing sheds light on Titan submersible implosion 00:34. Among the last words heard from the crew of an experimental submersible headed for the wreck of the Titanic were "all good here ...
Four years before the Titan implosion, Stanley accompanied Rush on one of the sub's test dives in the Bahamas, where it dived to a record-breaking Titanic-level depth of 12,336 feet.
When the Titan submersible imploded, no survivors were found. Now, nearly two years later, the U.S. Coast Guard has revealed that they found items that survived the implosion.
Titan was on an expedition to explore the wreckage of the Titanic when it imploded. The submersible is like a submarine but is smaller and less self-sufficient than military-grade submarines.
This undated image courtesy of OceanGate Expeditions, shows their Titan submersible launching from a platform. Rescue teams expanded their search underwater on June 20, 2023, as they raced against ...
The ill-fated journey of the Titan submersible — and the disastrous missteps of OceanGate’s billionaire CEO — is the focus of a Netflix documentary.
Netflix's new documentary 'Titan' details the doomed dive that killed five people, including the submersible's creator, Stockton Rush. 'Titan: The OceanGate Disaster': 5 Things We Learned ...
In the upcoming Netflix documentary “Titan: The OceanGate Disaster,” the director blames OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush for the Titan submersible implosion. “It comes down to Stockton Rush.
But what has enthralled people for 113 years about the fabled ocean liner is the same thing that makes Titan morbidly, and maybe endlessly, fascinating: hubris. Too few lifeboats, in one case.