Menu

Post image 1
Post image 2
Post image 3
Post image 4
Post image 5
Post image 6
1 / 6
0

Six years of obsessive forensics challenges some of the Titanic disaster’s favorite myths

Boing Boing·Jason Weisberger·21 days ago
#A2r5oY88
Reading 0:00
15s threshold

rsm titanic 1912 life buoy For more than a century, the Titanic has generated the kind of mythmaking normally reserved for Elvis sightings and alien autopsies, but historian Tim Maltin has spent years doing the profoundly unglamorous work of reading testimony, ship logs, and survivor accounts to argue that physics, not just hubris, helped script the disaster. Maltin claims super refraction, and a layer of low marine haze, created a situation where icebergs were harder to see, even tho the night was supposedly legendarily clear. Similar optical illusions may have convinced the Californian that the Titanic was not the ship they were looking at, as it appeared smaller and closer than they had assumed. "Textbook conditions for thermal inversion" may have been the factor that caused both the collision and the slow response. Maltin has also determined that the Titanic failed to ask for help for nearly 45 minutes after the collision.…

Continue reading — create a free account

Join HashtagPLUS to read full articles, follow hashtags, vote, and join the conversation.

Read More