The Titanic Wreck: Obsession, Discovery, and Controversy.

TL;DR Summary
Descendants of those who perished on the Titanic have criticized submersible tours of the wreckage, calling for the site to be treated with more respect. The underwater expedition to the Titanic’s wreckage, regarded by some as a watery “graveyard” for the 1,496 passengers and crew killed in the disaster, went awry shortly after the submersible launched its mission off the coast of Newfoundland with five people on board. The vessel lost contact with the support ship after just an hour and a half and has not been heard from since.
- 'Like Disneyland': Titanic Families Blast 'Disgusting' Tours of Wreckage The Daily Beast
- Behind the public's enduring obsession with the Titanic wreck The Washington Post
- Titanic submersible: The Titan search-and-rescue effort shows that risky undertakings need to consider any potential rescue needs The Conversation Indonesia
- How the Titanic was found during a top-secret U.S. Navy expedition The Washington Post
- Robert Ballard found the Titanic wreckage in 1985. Here's how he discovered it and what has happened to its artifacts since. CBS News
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