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Wreck of the Titanic

The wreck of RMS Titanic lies at a depth of about 12,500 feet (3,800 metres; 2,100 fathoms), about 370 nautical miles (690 kilometres) south-southeast off the coast of Newfoundland. It lies in two main pieces about 2,000 feet (600 m) apart. The bow is still recognisable with many preserved interiors, despite deterioration and damage sustained hitting the sea floor. In contrast, the stern is heavily damaged. A debris field around the wreck contains hundreds of thousands of items spilled from the ship as she sank. The bodies of the passengers and crew would also be distributed across the seabed, but have since been consumed by other organisms.

Not to be confused with The Wreck of the Titan: Or, Futility.

Wreck of the Titanic

Collision with an iceberg

15 April 1912 (1912-04-15)

370 nmi (690 km) south-southeast of Newfoundland, North Atlantic Ocean

1 September 1985 (1985-09-01)

The Titanic sank in 1912, when she collided with an iceberg during her maiden voyage. Numerous expeditions unsuccessfully tried using sonar to map the seabed in the hope of finding the wreckage. In 1985, the wreck was finally located by a joint French–American expedition led by Jean-Louis Michel of IFREMER and Robert Ballard of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, originally on a mission to find two nuclear cold war submarines. The wreck has been the focus of intense interest and has been visited by numerous tourist and scientific expeditions, including by the submersible Titan, which imploded near the wreck in June 2023, killing all five aboard.


Controversial salvage operations have recovered thousands of items from the Titanic, which have been conserved and put on public display. Many schemes have been proposed to raise the wreck, including filling it with ping-pong balls, injecting it with 180,000 tons of Vaseline, or using half a million tons of liquid nitrogen to encase it in an iceberg that would float to the surface. However, the wreck is too fragile to be raised and is protected by a UNESCO convention.

the largest piece of the Titanic's wreck to be recovered

The Big Piece

British Wreck Commissioner's inquiry into the sinking of the Titanic

United States Senate inquiry into the sinking of the Titanic

RMS Titanic Maritime Memorial Act

Agreement Concerning the Shipwrecked Vessel RMS Titanic

International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea

List of archaeological sites beyond national boundaries

Ballard, Robert D. (December 1985). "How We Found Titanic". National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 168, no. 6. pp. 696–719.

Ballard, Robert D. (December 1986). "A Long Last Look at Titanic". National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 170, no. 6. pp. 698–727.

Ballard, Robert D. (October 1987). "Epilogue for Titanic". National Geographic Magazine. Vol. 172, no. 4. pp. 454–463.

Media related to Titanic wreck at Wikimedia Commons

(video). youtube.com. National Geographic. 28 January 2023.

"Investigating the Titanic (Full Episode) / Drain the Oceans"

(video). youtube.com. BBC News. 17 May 2023.

"Scan of Titanic reveals wreck as never seen before - BBC News"