Added: 3 years ago
From: zzlpn
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  • So this is part 4, and so far, this should be retitled anything but "Deep Inside" Titanic. There has been about 2 minutes out of 40 that have been "deep inside"

  • did you guys find any diamonds?

  • even after all these years, she's still breathtakingly beautifull

  • they shouldv saved more of the coal workers

  • Comment removed

  • thing which angers me is they saved very few of them infact they could have save many!!

  • this is mind blowing!!

  • Amazing footage..

  • @charlieiscool1000

    ummm...2 miles IS >10, 000 ft.

  • how come nobody hanged ( executed)--how come????/

  • @rollingstopp what, the dead captain?

  • @rollingstopp Your fucked up, get some help.

  • icebergs are not a new thing--again icebgs are not a new thing.. captain and crew was incompetent== they failed there responsability==it kinda shows-- bastards

  • its amazing how they can tell what they're looking at on the ship, with all that debri and rust.

  • i wanna go down there and see it for myself now

  • edith is so dumb. she sounds like she's complaining about how people threw her into the lifeboat. well then... her life didn't HAVE to be saved. geez lady.

  • wish those foamers would shut up

  • Это пиздато

  • my grandma was born in 1912...the underwater shots are very beautiful.

    The technology helps us to see the story they is so deep in the ocean.

    This is fascinating.

    But there are many people died ..

    Thanks for the documentation

  • i dont know who to feel more bad for the children who lost a loved one or a person that died on the ship =/

  • Wow, looking at pics of the real Molly Brown and Murdoch you realise they cast actors who looked like them to play them in the movie.

  • Imagine, deep beneath the surface, this mighty ship lays on the ocean floor. 98 years have passed since she went down, still this mighty piece of engineering is amazing. All those who perished with her. R.I.P I can't imagine how it felt when you fell into that icy water -2 Celsius. Its also amazing that these tiny submarines can handle the gigantic pressure which would crush anything else into a small can.

  • this is so interestingg....

  • love it, After titanic sank in 1912

  • Anyone notice the exposed boiler faces are pushed in compared to the photos of the boilers in the shop? That is a lot of pressure.

  • @stars1776 You've been watching The Matrix too much.

  • thats part of the game titanic adventure out of time

  • No. By the time it was first found in 1985, materials like carpet and human remains were devoured by undersea organisms. You'd be surprised at how marine life can easily disparate underwater evidence.

  • @FreedomSoarsTheSky 8 months to eat a full blue whale..i aint surprised at all..

  • Love the use of the CGI from the Cyberflix game

    "Titanic: Adventure Out of Time" xD

  • Amazing how life is still so prevalent 10,000 feet down.

  • Its only 2 miles down which is still very deep but its not 10 000 ft thats how high a plane normally flys when its flying from the ground thats just obserd.

  • @charlieiscool1000 uh planes fly anywhere between 30 to 50 maybe 60 thousand feet in the air

  • No they dont i was talking about small planes that only fly up to around 3 thousand feet and the maximum height that a airliner like a 747 flys up too is about 39 - 40.000 feet alot higher than just 2 miles which is still very high up and still very deep.

  • It's so much bigger than the video makes it seem.

  • I know this sounds really dumb and I'm being deadly serious when I ask this, but can actual divers not go inside titanic or is the pressure too high?

  • The pressure is roughly three tons per square inch. So no, unless you want to crushed like a bug.

  • @Zestence they could probably lift some of it out of the water. but they view it as disresepcting a grave

  • @loupremo,

    I dont think they could lift it out of the water because of all the decay, it would just crumble and be lost. Due to decay it all might be lost in another 30 years. :(

  • its actually about 600lbs per square inch lol...not three tonnes like the guy below suggests :)

  • at those depths dude, the pressure would crush any diver like a tin can

  • I agree with someone's comment below about Ismay.

    He was a scapegoat. Since Captain Smith and Thomas Andrews died, people and the media was looking for someone to blame. He also had influential enemies who jumped at smearing his reputation.

    In his situation, I don't really think it was an act of cowardice for just surviving. He helped usher all the people he could into the lifeboats until there was no one else around before he got on as the last person.

  • wow.. look at those boilers at 3.00 they are huge and the number of them... wow Titanic is HUGE !

  • enough lieing ok, no one needs a liar. If one of there relatives was on that ship, they would be over 100 years old.

  • this ship is still Beautiful

  • wow the titanic was huge

  • At 5:41, there... interesting. :)

    I didn't think there were still spots that the white/black paint could be distinguished on. I thought the whole wreck was green.

  • Oh yes, Ismay played a big part in lowering and loading the lifeboats (in his bare feet most of the time!). He was truly one of the heroes in the ordeal, and it's really a pity that there are so many rumors involving him jumping in or sneaking onto a lifeboat, where in reality he was ordered on the last one to leave by Officer Wilde!

    He was truly a good man; people just wanted somebody to blame. Sadly, there's yet to be a movie about the Titanic to portray Ismay as the man he truly was.

  • @OlympicClassDandy ive never read where he was ordered into the boat by wilde. could you please let me know where this info is from? thanks.

  • the only documentaries i can watch all day w/out falling asleep are the ones about Titanic.

  • Rofl, me too, but i love this footage!

  • if i were there I would have tried to chuck a whole heap of rubbish/furnature in the water and tried to float on that :(

  • they did :(

  • yeah or at least try to swim to one of the life boats. you wonder what you might do in a situation like that, but you never know.

  • After three seconds they had fallen into the low tempered water, they get hypertonia, what caused paralysis. They could not swim.

  • very interesting documentry

  • Thank you so much for this footage!

  • Magnificent video! Even more complete than the broadcast version on Discovery Channel! My sincere gratitude to you, 'zzipn', for posting this documantary in its entirety! This has been one of my favorite Discovery Channel specials for a long time!

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