Smithsonian Magazine on MSN
The Titanic’s Sister Ship, the Britannic, Sank in 1916. For the First Time, Divers Have Recovered Artifacts From Its Wreck
The luxury liner was requisitioned as a hospital ship during World War I. Thirty people died after the vessel struck a German ...
A routine Titanic survey turned into a biodiversity surprise—on a rocky ridge no one expected. Here’s what explorers found in ...
In collaboration with the discoverer of the RMS Titanic, Dr. Robert "Bob" Ballard, the Peoria Riverfront Museum announces the world premiere of Finding Titanic: The Secret Mission, presented by CEFCU, ...
LOST artefacts from Titanic’s wrecked sister ship have been recovered for the first time more than a century after a mine ...
An 11-person diving team recovered luxury items and equipment from the Britannic wreck, lying 400 feet deep off the Greek ...
The world renowned oceanographer famous for leading the team that located the wreckage of the Titanic 40 years ago will visit ...
Dr. Bob Ballard, the man who discovered the Titanic in 1985, opened a new exhibit at the Peoria Riverfront Museum featuring ...
Bob Ballard is still exploring the ocean seafloor 40 years after discovering the Titanic’s final resting place in the ...
Called the HMHS Britannic, it was one of three Olympic-class ocean liners built by the White Star Lines company in the early ...
Thirty of the more than 1,060 people on board the Britannic died when the lifeboats they were in were struck by the ship's still-turning propellers.
Two years after the Oceangate disaster killed five people, a billionaire is planning to visit the Titanic wreck, which is located 12,500 feet below the North Atlantic Ocean, the New York Post reported ...
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