Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Company chronicles Titanic’s decay

-

The Titanic is disappeari­ng. The iconic ocean liner that was sunk by an iceberg is now slowly succumbing to metal-eating bacteria: Holes pervade the wreckage, the crow’s nest is already gone and the railing of the ship’s iconic bow could collapse at any time.

Racing against the inevitable, an undersea exploratio­n company’s expedition to the site of the wreckage will begin what’s expected to be an annual chroniclin­g of the ship’s deteriorat­ion. With the help of wealthy tourists, experts hope to learn more about the vessel as well as the underwater ecosystem that shipwrecks spawn.

“The ocean is taking this thing, and we need to document it before it all disappears or becomes unrecogniz­able,” Stockton Rush, president of OceanGate Expedition­s, said Friday from a ship headed to the North Atlantic wreck site.

The 109-year-old ocean liner is being battered by deep-sea currents and bacteria that consumes hundreds of pounds of iron a day. Some have predicted the ship could vanish in a matter of decades as holes yawn in the hull and sections disintegra­te.

Since the ship’s 1985 discovery, the 100-foot forward mast has collapsed. The crow’s nest from which a lookout shouted, “Iceberg, right ahead!” disappeare­d. And the poop deck, where passengers crowded as the ship sank, folded under itself.

The gymnasium near the grand staircase has fallen in. And a 2019 expedition discovered that the captain’s haunting bathtub, which became visible after the outer wall of the captain’s cabin fell away, is gone.

“At some point you would expect the railing on the bow, which is very iconic, to have collapsed,” Mr. Rush said.

The company has outfitted

its carbon fiber-and-titanium submersibl­e with high-definition cameras and multi-beam sonar equipment, Mr. Rush said. Charting the decomposit­ion can help scientists predict the fate of other deep-sea wrecks, including those that sank during the world wars.

OceanGate also plans to document the site’s sea life, such as crabs and corals. Hundreds of species have only been seen at the wreck, Mr. Rush said.

Another focus will be the debris field and its artifacts. David Concannon, an OceanGate adviser who’s been involved in various Titanic expedition­s, said he once followed a trail “of light debris and small personal effects like shoes and luggage” for 1.2 miles.

The expedition includes archaeolog­ists and marine biologists. But OceanGate is also bringing roughly 40 people who paid to come along. They’ll take turns operating sonar equipment and performing other tasks in the five-person submersibl­e.

They’re funding the expedition by spending anywhere from $100,000 to $150,000 apiece.

“Somebody paid $28 million to go with Blue Origin to space, not even the moon,” said Renata Rojas, 53, of Hoboken, N.J. “This is cheap in comparison.”

Obsessed with the Titanic since she was a kid, Ms. Rojas said she started studying oceanograp­hy in hopes of one day discoverin­g the wreck. But it was found the same year, prompting her to pursue a career in banking instead.

“I kind of need to see it with my own eyes to know that it’s really real,” she said.

Bill Sauder, a Titanic historian who previously managed research for the company that owns the ship’s salvage rights, said he doubts the expedition will discover “anything that’s front-page news.” But he said it will improve the world’s understand­ing of the wreck’s layout and debris field.

OceanGate will not take anything from the site, making this expedition far less controvers­ial than the nowscuttle­d plans by another firm to retrieve the Titanic’s radio.

RMS Titanic, the company that owns the wreck’s salvage rights, wanted to exhibit the radio equipment. But the proposal sparked a court battle last year with the U.S. government. It said the expedition would break federal law and a pact with Britain to leave the wreck undisturbe­d because it’s a gravesite.

All but about 700 of the roughly 2,200 passengers and crew died after the ship struck an iceberg in 1912.

The court battle ended after the firm indefinite­ly delayed its plans because of complicati­ons brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic. But it’s possible that not everyone will approve of this next mission.

“Let nature take back what is hers,” Ed Kamuda, then the president of the Titanic Historical Society, told The Associated Press in 2003. “It’s only a matter of time before it’s a brown stain and a collection of pig iron on the ocean floor.”

 ?? OceanGate via AP ?? OceanGate Expedition­s will use its Titan submersibl­e, above, to dive to the sunken Titanic and record its deteriorat­ion.
OceanGate via AP OceanGate Expedition­s will use its Titan submersibl­e, above, to dive to the sunken Titanic and record its deteriorat­ion.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States