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Titan submersible: ‘Presumed human remains’ discovered during dive to Titanic wreck

TV images showed the Titan sub’s nose cone and a side panel with wires hanging out being hoisted from a ship onto a flatbed truck.

Submersible wreckage brought to shore after underwater implosion

Experts have recovered presumed human remains from what is left of the Titan sub that imploded, killing five people, during a dive to the ­Titanic wreck, the US Coast Guard said overnight on Wednesday.

“United States medical professionals will conduct a formal analysis of presumed human ­remains that have been carefully recovered,” the agency said.

On board were British ­explorer Hamish Harding, French submarine expert Paul-Henri Nargeolet, Pakistani-British tycoon Shahzada Dawood and his son Suleman, and Stockton Rush, CEO of the sub’s operator, OceanGate Expeditions.

(L-R, top to bottom) Hamish Harding, Stockton Rush, Paul-Henri Nargeolet, Suleman Dawood and his father Shahzada Dawood were killed in the disaster. Picture: AFP.
(L-R, top to bottom) Hamish Harding, Stockton Rush, Paul-Henri Nargeolet, Suleman Dawood and his father Shahzada Dawood were killed in the disaster. Picture: AFP.

They presumably died ­instantly when the Titan sub, about the size of an SUV car, ­imploded under the crushing pressure of the North Atlantic at a depth of more than 3km. Mangled debris recovered from the submersible was offloaded earlier in the day in eastern Canada, bringing to an end a difficult search-and-recovery operation.

That debris will now be taken aboard a US Coast Guard cutter to a US port for further analysis, the organisation said.

“There is still a substantial amount of work to be done to understand the factors that led to the catastrophic loss of the Titan and help ensure a similar tragedy does not occur again,” said the leader of the US probe into the tragedy, Captain Jason ­Neubauer.

Television images showed what appeared to be the Titan sub’s nose cone and a side panel with electronics and wires hanging out being hoisted from a ship onto a flatbed truck at a Canadian Coast Guard terminal in St John’s, Newfoundland.

Pelagic Research, the New York company that owns the Odysseus remote-operated ­vehicle used in the search for the ill-fated submersible, said its offshore search-and-recovery operation has wrapped up.

Canadian officials declined to comment on the recovery of the sub debris.

Titan was reported missing on June 18 and the US Coast Guard said last Thursday that all five people aboard the submersible had died after the vessel suffered a catastrophic implosion.

The Titan lost contact with the outside world shortly after the dive began, setting off an urgent search that transfixed millions for days.

Shortly after the submersible’s disappearance, a top secret military acoustic detection system heard what the U.S. Navy suspected was the Titan’s implosion, The Wall Street Journal reported. The discovery, reported to the Coast Guard commander on site, played a role in narrowing the scope of the search.

A debris field was found on the seafloor, 500m from the bow of the Titanic, which sits more nearly 4km below the ocean’s surface and 640km off the coast of Newfoundland.

The announcement of the implosion ended a multinational search-and-rescue operation that captured the world’s attention since the tourist craft went missing. The Coast Guard has launched its highest level of probe, called a Marine Board of Investigation, into this accident.

AFP, WSJ

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Original URL: https://www.theaustralian.com.au/world/presumed-human-remains-discovered-in-titan-submersible/news-story/6885fdd7e30eb62498eef421053432ec