News
It's perhaps the most famous ship in history - but was Titanic really billed as unsinkable? A document dating before the ship's maiden voyage may finally reveal the truth.
A full 3D scan of the Titanic enables everyone to virtually visit the shipwreck of the luxury vessel — and could resolve long-standing questions ...
From its extreme depth, over 12,000 feet underwater to the fragile, corroded state of the wreck, the Titanic presents enormous technical, environmental, and ethical obstacles.
This week marks 113 years since the sinking of the Titanic. Now, there’s a new tool to explore it: a full-scale digital twin of the wreckage created with cutting edge 3D scanning technology ...
A three week mission to the North Atlantic in 2022 helped produce a 3D model of the Titanic. Now comes the National Geographic documentary.
On April 11, National Geographic viewers can see a groundbreaking scientific achievement unlike anything seen before in Titanic: The Digital Resurrection.
A shattered porthole, likely smashed by the iceberg, is one of several haunting new details uncovered in a fresh look at Titanic’s 3D scans.
Scans of the wreck of the Titanic appear to show evidence for heartbreaking reports from the ship's final few hours. The wreck of the Titanic, which sank in April 1912, is slowly disintegrating ...
This rendering of the Titanic is based on 715,000 photos and millions of laser scans of the famous wreck, which were stitched together to create a perfect digital replica of what remains of the ship.
Evidence shows the sunken ship was number 401, the Titanic. Auctioned items from the Olympic in 2023 and 2019 support this, as do items recovered from the Titanic wreck, which bore the number 401.
Divers rediscovered Titanic's lost bronze "Diana of Versailles" statue, highlighting ongoing ship decay and marking a key find since its last sighting in 1986.
The exploratory company that holds the rights to the RMS Titanic’s watery grave completed its first expedition of the site in 14 years and delivered bad news for historians — parts of the leg… ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results