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Transcript
00:00 On April 10, 1912, the RMS Titanic set sail from England.
00:05 But this wasn't the launch of a regular ship.
00:08 The Titanic was the largest liner ever built at the time.
00:11 It was 882 feet long.
00:14 That's nearly the size of three soccer fields.
00:16 And measured from the hull to the top of the smokestacks,
00:19 the ship was an impressive 175 feet tall.
00:22 That's the size of a 17-story building.
00:25 Deemed unsinkable, it took 3,000 workers almost three years to build.
00:30 But a mere four days into its very first voyage, at 11.40 p.m.,
00:37 the ship collided with an iceberg and was lost beneath the waves of the Atlantic Ocean.
00:43 It took the liner only two hours and 40 minutes to sink.
00:46 And of more than 2,200 passengers and crew members on board, only 706 survived.
00:54 The wreck would remain lost for another 73 years,
00:59 hiding its many secrets within the frigid Atlantic waters.
01:02 And if it wasn't for a man whose whole life had been devoted to exploring the sea,
01:07 the giant ship might have remained lost for a lot longer.
01:11 That man was Robert Ballard.
01:15 As a child, Ballard was obsessed with the ocean.
01:19 This fascination started when he was just 12 years old.
01:22 That's when he watched a film adaptation of Jules Verne's science fiction novel,
01:27 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
01:29 It had everything to spark a young person's imagination,
01:35 from adventure and strange creatures to a powerful underwater vehicle called the Nautilus.
01:40 It could travel anywhere in the world you wanted to go.
01:43 From that moment, life on dry land was no longer in Ballard's future.
01:51 When he was 23, he was assigned to the Deep Submergence Group.
01:55 There, he helped develop techniques to search the ocean floor.
01:59 His biggest accomplishment was the creation of Alvin.
02:03 It was a small, easy-to-maneuver submarine that could carry three people.
02:10 It also featured an external mechanical arm,
02:13 designed to gather underwater samples while the crew remained safe and dry inside.
02:20 Alvin the submarine quickly proved useful for a variety of tasks.
02:24 For example, once it was used to track down an aircraft that had crashed into the sea.
02:29 But the vessel experienced a series of setbacks.
02:35 In one case, it was attacked by a swordfish,
02:38 which caused the submarine to resurface quickly.
02:40 The swordfish, still stuck in the outer skin of the submarine, became that night's dinner.
02:48 And in October 1968, the submarine was being lowered into the water
02:53 when the cables holding it snapped,
02:55 sending it careening into the ocean along with three crew members on board.
03:00 And because the small vessel was still open,
03:02 it immediately filled with water and quickly began to sink.
03:06 Luckily, the crew managed to escape, but Alvin was gone.
03:12 Bad weather hampered multiple attempts to recover the vessel.
03:16 It wasn't until the following year that it was finally returned to the surface.
03:20 In time, Alvin would be improved.
03:25 Its hull would be strengthened by titanium, giving it a higher depth rating,
03:29 thus making it even better suited for ocean exploration.
03:33 The specialized submarine would come in handy in many of Ballard's 100+ expeditions.
03:39 The man was one of the first to explore an underwater mountain chain
03:42 called the Mid-Atlantic Ridge in the Atlantic Ocean.
03:46 And when he found thermal vents in the Galapagos Rift in the late 70s,
03:52 he also helped discover and document the process of chemosynthesis.
03:56 That's a complicated chemical synthesis of food energy by bacteria.
04:00 But his biggest discovery was still to come.
04:06 Ballard claimed he'd never been a "Titanic fanatic,"
04:09 but he eventually became obsessed with finding the ship
04:13 after watching other explorers try and fail.
04:16 As he said, "Titanic was clearly the big Mount Everest at the time.
04:22 Many others had tried, many that I thought would have succeeded,
04:25 or should have succeeded but didn't."
04:27 Ballard began thinking about finding the ship as early as 1973.
04:34 And four years later, he actually made an attempt.
04:37 He used the deep-sea salvage vessel Sea Probe,
04:41 which was a drill ship equipped with cameras and sonar.
04:44 But he was forced to give up when the drilling pipe broke.
04:47 It just wasn't his time.
04:49 In the early 80s, a Texas oil man named Jack Grimm
04:55 tried to find the wreck on three different occasions.
04:58 Once, Grimm was actually right over the Titanic,
05:02 but his equipment failed to detect it.
05:04 That's what we call extreme bad luck.
05:06 Ballard was just biding his time.
05:10 He needed a plan, and some help.
05:13 The first issue was getting down to the bottom of the Atlantic.
05:17 The furthest down he had ever traveled before was 20,000 feet.
05:21 And this trip took him three hours.
05:23 And that didn't include the way back up.
05:25 Ballard knew he could use Alvin,
05:30 already enhanced with a titanium hull,
05:32 to withstand the pressure of the ocean.
05:34 But he also needed something that didn't require him to actually go down with it.
05:39 An unpiloted, remote-controlled submarine would be ideal.
05:43 But first, he would have to create one.
05:46 He reached out to the authorities,
05:50 hoping they would provide funding for his project.
05:52 And though officials had no interest in the Titanic,
05:55 they were willing to help.
05:57 Ah, but there was a catch.
06:01 Ballard had to first focus on tracking down two submarines,
06:04 the Thresher and the Scorpion,
06:06 which had sunk to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in the 1960s.
06:10 The authorities were hoping to study them
06:12 to find out why they had sunk in the first place.
06:15 They also wanted to know if they could be recovered,
06:18 or if it was safe to leave them on the ocean floor.
06:21 Only when he had successfully completed this task
06:26 would he be free to use any remaining time on his contract to find the Titanic.
06:31 With no other options for funding, Ballard took the offer.
06:36 He got to work.
06:39 First, he created two new devices.
06:41 Argo was an unpiloted, deep-towed undersea video camera sled.
06:46 It was designed to take photos and record videos
06:49 from a series of cameras mounted on it.
06:51 It could work at depths of up to 20,000 feet,
06:54 and it could also explore nearly 98% of the ocean floor.
06:59 Argo was supposed to be tethered to a boat.
07:03 As the boat moved, Argo would be pulled behind,
07:06 floating just above the ocean floor.
07:09 The camera would then transmit images to the surface.
07:12 The second device was a small robotic vehicle called Jason Jr.
07:19 It was also controlled remotely,
07:21 which allowed the crew inside a submarine, like Alvin,
07:24 to get closer to and photograph underwater objects.
07:28 Ballard was now ready.
07:31 He knew he had to find those submarines quickly,
07:34 and it didn't take him long.
07:36 Much to his relief, the search was relatively simple,
07:39 and he was able to fulfill his obligations with 12 days to spare.
07:44 With almost two weeks to devote to finding the Titanic,
07:49 he set out to explore the ocean.
07:51 He focused the search close to Newfoundland, Canada,
07:54 pulling Argo along the ocean floor and reviewing the images it collected.
08:00 And after a few days of nothing,
08:02 they eventually found riveted hull plates and a boiler.
08:06 Could this be it?
08:07 The next day, a ship's large bow was revealed.
08:11 On September 1, 1985, Ballard and his fellow crew members realized
08:16 they had finally found the infamous ship.
08:19 The discovery resulted in a mix of emotions.
08:23 Ballard was excited to be the first to find the Titanic's final resting place,
08:28 but he was also overwhelmed by the sense of grief
08:31 for those who had suffered when the ship had gone down.
08:34 Over the next four days, the crew explored the wreck.
08:39 They found the crow's nest, from where the iceberg had first been spotted.
08:43 Plus, there was finally evidence of how the massive ship had split in two
08:48 before sinking, with both halves of the ship found.
08:51 There was furniture and dinnerware,
08:55 and sadly, several leather shoes of those who hadn't made it to safety
08:59 were scattered about the ocean floor.
09:01 Ballard succeeded where others had failed
09:05 and became an instant celebrity around the world.
09:08 You'd think that locating the Titanic would be enough for one man,
09:12 but not for Ballard.
09:13 In 2019, he took on the challenge of solving another mystery,
09:20 the disappearance of Amelia Earhart.
09:23 Earhart had attempted to be the first woman to fly around the world.
09:27 Unfortunately, she disappeared somewhere over the Pacific Ocean in 1937.
09:32 She and her plane were never found.
09:36 Ballard hoped that his luck with the Titanic
09:39 would help with finding where Earhart had gone down,
09:42 but his expedition failed to find anything.
09:44 And though Robert Ballard has found more shipwrecks than anybody else,
09:50 it's only the tip of the iceberg.
09:52 It's estimated that there are over 3 million shipwrecks in the ocean,
09:56 and Ballard has only located 100 of them.
09:59 Now, in his late 70s,
10:03 the man is hoping to encourage young people to continue his work
10:06 of exploring the ocean and its many mysteries.
10:09 In 1989, he started the Jason Learning Project
10:13 to inspire grade school students to pursue science, technology, engineering, and math.
10:20 He has his own research vessel called the E.V. Nautilus,
10:24 after the name of the submarine in Jules Verne's novel,
10:27 a fitting tribute to the story that inspired his career.
10:31 Once a famous giant, the largest ship of that time,
10:36 now two grand pieces lying on the ocean bottom about 2,000 feet apart,
10:41 torn by the catastrophic collision of time itself.
10:45 The stern of the Titanic got completely ruined after hitting the ocean floor,
10:50 but you can still recognize the bow since many interiors were left preserved.
10:55 There's a type of bacteria found on the ship's rusticles.
10:59 A rusticle is this brownish formation of rust.
11:02 It occurs deep underwater when the wrought iron the ship is made of oxidizes.
11:07 It means the bacteria eat the iron of the Titanic's hull, piece by piece,
11:12 and it seems they might finish their snack by 2030,
11:16 way sooner than when anyone would expect the wreck to be gone forever.
11:20 You may think it would probably be easier to take the wreck out of the water so that we got to keep it,
11:26 but it would fall apart if anyone tried to do that.
11:29 It's been in the water for more than 110 years now,
11:33 and is now so rusty that no one would be able to reconstruct some parts
11:38 even if we managed to get the ship out of the ocean depths.
11:42 What do you think?
11:44 Could any of about 700 people that had survived the sinking of the Titanic hear it hit the ocean bottom?
11:50 The largest ship that had ever been made till then disappeared literally before their eyes after all.
11:55 But sound most likely wouldn't have traveled from water to air.
11:59 We can't hear that well in water because our bodies are not designed to hear in such environments.
12:05 And although passengers were close to the sinking site,
12:08 the Titanic still hit the bottom a long distance away, 12,500 feet.
12:14 There are so many underwater landslides and earthquakes we cannot hear,
12:20 and they make way more noise than a single ship slamming into the ocean floor.
12:24 Most vibrations and sounds must have dispersed over a large area.
12:29 Also, the down blast of water which many believe hit the Titanic after it had touched the bottom of the ocean
12:35 would have pushed back the majority of the potential acoustic vibrations.
12:39 Plus, the bottom of the ocean is not hard enough to produce such loud noises.
12:44 Many survivors said they had heard terrifying noises as the Titanic was breaking apart,
12:51 but none mentioned hearing anything after the ship disappeared below the surface of the water.
12:56 Some survivors shared how chaotic it was when passengers, mainly women and children, were getting into lifeboats.
13:04 There weren't enough boats, and still, some of them weren't even filled to their full capacity.
13:09 No one knew how to react properly in such a situation.
13:13 The lifeboat drill had been scheduled for the morning before the Titanic hit the iceberg,
13:18 but for some reason, it got cancelled.
13:21 A giant ocean liner everyone believes is unsinkable takes a trip across the ocean.
13:28 On its way, it strikes an iceberg and sinks.
13:31 Yeah, we all know how the story goes, but what's scary is that it's also the plot of The Wreck of the Titan,
13:37 a novel published in 1898, 14 years before the Titanic went to the ocean bottom or was even constructed.
13:45 In the novel, the Titan, what a scarily accurate name too,
13:50 didn't have enough life jackets, vests and lifeboats for all the passengers on board.
13:55 It was also the largest ship of that time, almost identical in size to the Titanic.
14:01 And both the Titan and Titanic sank in April.
14:05 Dorothy Gibson was an American silent film actress.
14:10 She was also one of the Titanic passengers.
14:13 She survived the catastrophe right after she came to New York.
14:16 She started filming Saved from the Titanic.
14:19 The film was released only one month after the ship sank.
14:22 Dorothy was even wearing the same shoes and clothes she had worn when she had actually been on the ship.
14:28 The movie was successful, but it got destroyed in a fire, so it only exists in memories, like Jack Dawson.
14:36 Titanic wasn't all alone in the restless waves of the cold ocean near the iceberg it struck.
14:43 The SS Californian was relatively close.
14:46 Their radio was shut off for that night though.
14:49 At one moment, the crew members noticed mysterious lights in the sky.
14:53 They immediately went to wake their captain up to tell him, but he issued no orders.
14:58 Some believed it was just fireworks.
15:01 They never realized it was actually a call for help.
15:04 The flares, crew members of the Titanic sent off to the sky, hoping someone would notice.
15:10 By the time the SS Californian got the SOS message, it was already too late.
15:16 Some say a full moon may have been the reason the iceberg crossed paths with the gigantic ship.
15:22 A full moon may have caused incredibly strong tides that eventually sent multiple icebergs southward,
15:28 right when the Titanic was crossing that area.
15:32 Would you dare to taste cheese from the Titanic?
15:36 The wreck has been under the ocean surface for more than 100 years now.
15:40 It took more than 70 years to find it.
15:43 By that time, most of the food that had gone down together with the ship had, of course, spoiled.
15:49 But it's possible there's still some of it left.
15:52 Some foods are protected from decay, for example, cheese.
15:56 The microbes that turn milk into cheese create special conditions to protect the product from spoiling.
16:03 Multiple things have survived the Titanic.
16:06 A handwritten letter where a mother and a daughter wrote to the girl's grandma about the amazing journey they were on together.
16:13 The letter has been around for more than 100 years and got sold at an auction.
16:18 A battered pair of white cotton gloves was found in the wreck.
16:23 Musicians on the Titanic played till the very last moment.
16:27 Sheet music and one violin were found among the wreckage.
16:31 The bell one of the crew members rang three times to warn there was a very close iceberg on their way.
16:37 A pocket watch that stopped at 1.45 a.m., the time when the ship went under the water.
16:43 Perhaps one person could have changed what happened on the Titanic.
16:48 David Blair was a pretty lucky man.
16:51 He was supposed to take the spot of the second officer of the Titanic.
16:55 He was pulled out at the last moment, which eventually saved his life.
16:59 It was a great thing for him, but something clouded his joy.
17:02 What if he was the only person who could have done something to save the ship and the passengers?
17:08 Back in the day, ships didn't have smart advanced technology like they do today.
17:14 They couldn't see a threat on the horizon.
17:17 Binoculars were pretty helpful, but the crew members on the Titanic didn't have access to the room where they were kept.
17:24 David Blair was the man responsible for the keys.
17:27 He left the ship in a hurry and forgot to hand over the keys that were in his pocket.
17:31 Maybe if the crew members had had access to the binoculars,
17:35 they would have seen the iceberg on time and had enough time to change course.
17:39 It's possible that the giant iceberg that sent the Titanic to the ocean bottom
17:45 was made of snow that had fallen in southwest Greenland.
17:48 Scientists even used a computer model to calculate the paths the iceberg took in any given year,
17:55 taking into consideration ocean currents and weather readings for that year.
18:00 It's possible that the iceberg was 1,700 feet long with a weight of around 75 tons.
18:07 By the time it collided with the Titanic, it had dwindled down to only 1.5 tons.
18:13 Violet Constance Jessop was, as many called her, Miss Unsinkable.
18:19 She was only 24 years old when she joined the Titanic crew as a stewardess.
18:24 On the tragic night when the ship struck the iceberg, she was lying in bed.
18:29 As soon as she heard that something was going on, she got dressed and quickly went to the deck.
18:34 Violet helped passengers get into lifeboats.
18:37 Four years later, she was on the Britannic, the Titanic's sister ship.
18:42 Once again, the ship started sinking.
18:44 Not only did the woman survive another accident,
18:47 but she was also once again the one helping other people to escape the vessel
18:51 before it disappeared below the surface.
18:55 That's it for today.
18:57 So, hey, if you pacified your curiosity, then give the video a like and share it with your friends.
19:02 Or if you want more, just click on these videos and stay on the Bright Side!
19:06 Meet Arthur John Priest.
19:08 No, he isn't famous for being a painter or for discovering some long-lost treasure.
19:13 He didn't invent some cool gadget or break any world records.
19:17 No, Arthur John Priest is famous simply for being unsinkable.
19:22 Proving one can be both lucky and unlucky at the same time,
19:26 Priest was involved in, and survived, several mishaps at sea,
19:30 including the fateful maiden voyage of the Titanic.
19:33 Priest was not a rich man interested in sailing for pleasure.
19:37 He was part of the working class, employed as a stoker or fireman,
19:41 stuck for hours within the hot bowels of large steam-powered vessels.
19:46 His job was dirty and difficult.
19:48 He was responsible for keeping the furnaces lit,
19:51 feeding them coal to ensure enough steam was produced for the engines to work.
19:55 He had to be careful about not overheating the system or setting fire to the whole ship.
20:00 The furnaces had to be carefully watched and constantly fed.
20:04 He breathed it all in a while, working and fighting with the sweat and the dirt.
20:09 He would often work shirtless because of the heat, and was always covered in black coal dust.
20:14 And when he finally had a break, his shared living quarters were nearby in the same part of the ship.
20:20 He must have been good at his job, though, because he had no trouble finding work.
20:25 But wherever he went, bad luck seemed to follow.
20:28 The first incident was a mild one.
20:31 As a young man, Priest worked on the RMS Asturias.
20:35 The passenger liner first set sail in 1907,
20:38 traveling between Southampton in the UK to Buenos Aires in Argentina.
20:44 At some point during its maiden voyage, the ship suffered a small collision.
20:48 The damage was bad enough that the ship returned for repairs.
20:52 Thankfully, there were no reports of any serious injuries.
20:55 Priest, unfazed, simply went to work on another ship.
20:59 But his bad luck lingered on the Asturias.
21:02 In 1914, the Asturias became a hospital ship,
21:06 helping care for sick men and women around Europe while bringing them home to England.
21:11 But in March 1917, at just around midnight, the ship was struck by a foreign object.
21:17 Its hull was breached, and the engine room flooded.
21:20 The captain ordered everyone to abandon the ship,
21:23 sending crew, patients, and health staff scrambling for the lifeboats.
21:27 The vessel was still moving, powering through the water,
21:30 because the main controls, located within the flooded engine room, could not be turned off.
21:35 The captain refused to leave the ship while people were still trying to escape.
21:39 He was able to aim the Asturias towards Bolthead, where it finally hit land and couldn't sink.
21:45 The remaining lifeboats were lowered, and the final survivors made it to safety.
21:50 When they studied the damage on the ship later, the Asturias was declared a total write-off.
21:56 It might be hard to pin this particular disaster on Priest.
22:00 After all, he wasn't even on the ship at the time.
22:03 But it seemed that many of the ships on which he served were destined for trouble.
22:08 His bad luck followed him to his next job on the RMS Olympic, a massive ocean liner.
22:14 The Olympic was big.
22:16 In fact, it had been designed and built as part of the fleet that included the Titanic.
22:21 But with size came sacrifice.
22:23 The Olympic was great at moving in one direction, but very difficult to handle when it needed to turn.
22:29 It was September 1911.
22:31 The Olympic was trying to alter its course.
22:34 The Hawk, a smaller ship sailing nearby, didn't give the larger vessel enough room to maneuver,
22:39 and the two slammed into each other.
22:42 Because the Hawk was engineered to deal with potential confrontations when out at sea,
22:46 its reinforced bow tore through the Olympic.
22:50 Two large gashes appeared on the ocean liner's side.
22:53 The propeller shaft was badly twisted, and worse, the ship began to take on water.
22:59 Somehow, the Olympic made it to shore without sinking, and nobody was seriously hurt.
23:05 Priest had no idea that this was just a small taste of what his future held for him.
23:11 He next found employment on a brand new ship, a better ship,
23:14 an unsinkable marvel that was said to be the biggest vessel to have ever been built.
23:19 Yes, he was going to work on the Titanic.
23:22 And what a job!
23:24 It took 29 boilers, requiring 850 tons of coal a day, to produce enough steam to power the Titanic.
23:31 Priest was just one of 150 stokers toiling away in the ship's underbelly,
23:36 keeping those fires burning day and night.
23:39 He made around $30 a month.
23:41 But on April 14, 1912, he would find himself flung from a world of extreme heat
23:47 to one of blistering cold.
23:50 At approximately 11.35 pm, the crew spotted an iceberg.
23:54 The Titanic tried to avoid it, but the alarm had been sounded too late.
23:59 Five minutes later, the two collided.
24:02 The iceberg tore through the hull, and the once watertight compartments inside were badly ruptured.
24:07 As the cold Atlantic water flooded in, the ship began to sink.
24:12 Distress signals were sent, but the closest ship, the Carpathia, was over three hours away.
24:17 In the dark of night, and stuck in the middle of nowhere, the crew and passengers panicked.
24:23 Those who could scrambled for the lifeboats.
24:26 Others jumped into the icy waters.
24:28 In total, only 706 survived that terrible night.
24:33 Priest, at the time of the collision, was down in the ship's lower quarters.
24:37 He was on break, relaxing from a hard day of work.
24:40 And as the ship went down, so did his chances of survival.
24:44 He and his fellow workers were in the most dangerous position on the ship.
24:48 They had to make their way through a maze of corridors and gangways,
24:52 some of which were flooded, in a mad dash to the deck.
24:55 And then, they faced the frigid water, jumping in and desperately swimming to safety.
25:01 The ocean was so cold that Priest even suffered frostbite before finding his way onto a lifeboat.
25:07 He was one of only 44 stokers to survive that night.
25:11 After an experience like that, most of us would never set foot on a boat again.
25:16 But, Priest had to work.
25:18 His next job also ended in disaster.
25:21 He was offered employment on the HMS Alcantara.
25:25 It went down in 1916, and Priest was again one of the few to make it to safety.
25:30 He was badly wounded in the process.
25:33 But he kept pressing his luck, and his next job as a stoker may have felt eerily familiar.
25:39 He would be working on a ship built by the same people behind both the Olympic and the Titanic.
25:45 And this ship, named the Britannic, was the biggest of the three.
25:49 It was also believed to be a superior vessel, fitted with new safety features after the Titanic sank.
25:55 For example, it had 48 open lifeboats, 46 of which were the largest ever used on a ship before.
26:02 Two of these were even motorized and equipped with special communication devices.
26:07 The good news? The Britannic survived its first trip without incident.
26:11 It was already doing better than the Titanic ever did.
26:14 However, on November 21, 1916, the Britannic was shaken by a loud explosion while traveling through the key channel in the Aegean Sea.
26:23 The hull was damaged, and some of the compartments began to fill with water.
26:28 But, unlike the Titanic, the Britannic had been designed for just such an emergency.
26:33 It had been fitted with five watertight bulkheads.
26:36 Intact, these would help keep the ship safe and floating for a much longer period of time.
26:41 But there was one issue.
26:43 Port holes along the lower decks had foolishly been left open.
26:47 As the ship tilted, the port holes let in water, which flooded the Britannic and hastened its descent into the sea.
26:54 This effectively made those watertight bulkheads useless.
26:57 The ship was going down fast, much faster, in fact, than the Titanic had sunk.
27:04 35 of the lifeboats were successfully launched, saving most on board.
27:09 Of the 1,066 passengers and crew, 1,036 survived.
27:14 Priest, his luck intact, was one of them.
27:17 And yet, he still wasn't done with a life at sea.
27:21 He accepted a position as a stoker on the Donegal.
27:24 It was a smaller passenger ferry that had been converted for use as a hospital boat.
27:29 In April 1917, it was struck by a foreign object while fleeing an unsafe situation.
27:35 And though he suffered from a head injury, Priest was again one of the survivors.
27:40 It took experiencing two collisions and four sinkings before Priest was finally ready to retire.
27:46 In fact, he reportedly said he only gave it up because no one wanted to sail with him.
27:51 Can you blame them?
27:53 He would live out the rest of his life on dry land in Southampton, England,
27:57 with his wife Annie and their three sons.
28:00 But Arthur John Priest would always be remembered as the unsinkable stoker.

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