Titanic research dive reveals discovery, decay and new photos
Briefly

We haven't been to the wreck since 2010. It's been 14 years. So 14 years of technology, as we all know, is quite advanced from what we had back in 2010. What we were able to take down there, the cameras and the scanners, would make 2010's expedition look like child's play in terms of what we were able to learn from the wreck.
I have been a hopeless Titanic enthusiast since I was six years old, and it never ceased to amaze me that I was that close to the wreck. Seeing the first images of the ship on a screen, it was emotional. There were a lot of tears in the room for a lot of us, even the people who've been there before.
This summer, RMS Titanic, Inc. made its first unmanned dive to the site in 14 years, armed with high-resolution cameras and scanning equipment, taking over two million photos of the Titanic.
The goal was to image the wreck in the highest quality possible, and also to seek out artifacts for future recovery expeditions.
Read at www.npr.org
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