The Maui News

Human remains have likely been recovered from the Titan submersibl­e wreckage, US Coast Guard says

- By PATRICK WHITTLE

PORTLAND, Maine — Human remains have likely been recovered from the wreckage of the submersibl­e that imploded during an underwater voyage to view the Titanic, the U.S. Coast Guard said Wednesday.

The news came hours after the announceme­nt that debris from the Titan, collected from the seafloor more than 12,000 feet below the surface of the North Atlantic, had arrived in St. John’s, Newfoundla­nd. Twisted chunks of the submersibl­e were unloaded at a Canadian Coast Guard pier.

Recovering and scrutinizi­ng the wreckage is a key part of the investigat­ion into why the Titan imploded last week, killing all five people on board. The multiday search and eventual recovery of debris from the 22-foot vessel captured the world’s attention.

“There is still a substantia­l amount of work to be done to understand the factors that led to the catastroph­ic loss of the Titan and help ensure a similar tragedy does not occur again,” Coast Guard Chief Capt. Jason Neubauer said in a statement released late Wednesday afternoon.

The “presumed human remains” will be brought to the United States, where medical profession­als will conduct a formal analysis, Neubauer said. He added that the Coast Guard has convened an investigat­ion of the implosion at the highest level. The Marine Board of Investigat­ion will analyze and test evidence, including pieces of debris, at a port in the U.S. The board will share the evidence at a future public hearing whose date has not been determined, the Coast Guard said.

Neubauer said the evidence will provide “critical insights” into the cause of the implosion.

Debris from the Titan, which is believed to have imploded on June 18 as it made its descent, was located about 12,500 feet underwater and roughly 1,600 feet from the Titanic on the ocean floor. The Coast Guard is leading the investigat­ion, in conjunctio­n with several other government agencies in the U.S. and Canada.

Authoritie­s have not disclosed details of the debris recovery, which could have followed several approaches, according to Carl Hartsfield, who directs a lab at the Woods Hole Oceanograp­hic Institutio­n that designs and operates autonomous underwater vehicles and has been serving as a consultant to the Coast Guard.

“If the pieces are small, you can collect them together and put them in a basket or some kind of collection device,” Hartsfield said Monday. Bigger pieces could be retrieved with a remote-operated vehicle, or ROV, such as the one brought to the wreckage site by the Canadian ship Horizon Arctic to search the ocean floor. For extremely big pieces, a heavy lift could be used to pull them up with a tow line, he said.

Representa­tives for Horizon Arctic did not respond to requests for comment. The ROV’s owner, Pelagic Research Services, a company with offices in Massachuse­tts and New York, is “still on mission” and cannot comment on the investigat­ion, company spokespers­on Jeff Mahoney said Wednesday.

“They have been working around the clock now for 10 days, through the physical and mental challenges of this operation,” Mahoney said.

Analyzing the recovered debris could reveal important clues about what happened to the Titan, and there could be electronic data recorded by the submersibl­e’s instrument­s, Hartsfield said.

“So the question is, is there any data available? And I really don’t know the answer to that question,” he said Monday.

The Transporta­tion Safety Board of Canada, which is conducting a safety investigat­ion into the Titan’s Canadian-flagged mother ship, the Polar Prince, said Wednesday that it has sent that vessel’s voyage data recorder to a lab for analysis.

 ?? Paul Daly / The Canadian Press photo via AP ?? Debris from the Titan submersibl­e, recovered from the ocean floor near the wreck of the Titanic, is unloaded from the ship Horizon Arctic at the Canadian Coast Guard pier in St. John’s, Newfoundla­nd on Wednesday.
Paul Daly / The Canadian Press photo via AP Debris from the Titan submersibl­e, recovered from the ocean floor near the wreck of the Titanic, is unloaded from the ship Horizon Arctic at the Canadian Coast Guard pier in St. John’s, Newfoundla­nd on Wednesday.

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