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The Titanic hit an iceberg, not rocks. And it sank 400 miles south of Canada. It sank approximately 13,000 feet under the Atlantic ocean. So, in terms of the sea, it didn't sink that far away from land, so that is why we can still salvage things from the Titanic.
P.S: You might want to rename these thread posts instead of just calling them all "Question". Saves people the confusion and mods/admins the hassle of finding them.
(This post was last modified: 10 Aug 2019, 12:19 PM by Walnut Ghost.)
(10 Aug 2019, 12:15 PM)Sgt.Ghost Wrote: The Titanic hit an iceberg, not rocks. And it sank 400 miles south of Canada. It sank approximately 13,000 feet under the Atlantic ocean. So, in terms of the sea, it didn't sink that far away from land, so that is why we can still salvage things from the Titanic.
P.S: You might want to rename these thread posts instead of just calling them all "Question". Saves people the confusion and mods/admins the hassle of finding them.
ahh oh okay ty im just new to forum i know nothing and im thinking of questions i have yet unanswered
It sank as it was going too fast. It smashed into the ice berg at pretty much top speed. The force of the impact smashed just above one of the water tight compartments practically sinking the ship. The water would now flood every single compartment and it would not matter how much they tried to pump out as the hole was so big from the impact. If they has slowed down in the first place they would of been fine.