Titanic tourist submarine disappears in Atlantic Ocean

A tourist submarine has gone missing while exploring the Titanic shipwreck in the Atlantic Ocean, authorities said.

The Boston Coast Guard said a search began on Monday for the small sub, which takes tourists to view the famous shipwreck that sits about 12,500 feet at the bottom of the ocean off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, the BBC reported.

It remains unclear how many passengers, if any, were on board the sub when it disappeared and what tourist company owned the vessel.

The Boston Coast Guard did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for additional information.

The wreck of the disaster has remained a popular tourist destination, with passengers taking to the depth to see the haunting site where more than 1,500 passengers died after the “unsinkable” ship struck an iceberg and sank while sailing from Southampton, England, to New York in April 1912.

The Titanic wreckage sits about 370 miles off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada.
AP

Several companies offer tourists submarine rides to visit the shipwreck.
Several companies offer tourists submarine rides to visit the shipwreck.
via REUTERS

The Titanic lies fallen in two separate pieces after the ship split in half when it sank.
The Titanic lies fallen in two separate pieces after the ship split in half when it sank.
AP

The wreck was discovered in the Atlantic in 1985 about 370 miles off the Canadian coast, with the ship lying in two parts after it split in half during its sinking.

The catastrophe was immortalized in James Cameron’s 1997 film “Titanic,” starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet. The film shattered box office records at the time, earning $2.25 billion.

Tickets to view the shipwreck can go as high as $250,000, according to OceanGate Expeditions, one of the companies that offer submarine rides to the site.


The Titanic was touted as an unsinkable ship when it departed Southampton, England, in 1912.
The Titanic was touted as an unsinkable ship when it departed Southampton, England, in 1912.
Getty Images

Last month,  Atlantic Productions and deep-sea mapping company Magellan Ltd. released a series of more than 700,000 scans of the wreckage, displaying stunning 3D reconstructions of the doomed cruise liner.

The images were taken by a team using remote-controlled submersibles to survey the ship, a project that took more than 200 hours to complete.  

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