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Titanic

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Titanic the ship of dreams! THE UNSINKABLE Titanic It was on a Friday afternoon that the Titanic, the newest luxury-liner to Britain's White Star Fleet ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Titanic


1
Titanic the ship of dreams!
2
THE UNSINKABLE Titanic
  • It was on a Friday afternoon that the
    Titanic, the newest luxury-liner to Britain's
    White Star Fleet, departed from Queenstown,
    Ireland, on her maiden voyage from Southampton,
    England to New York.
  • It carried 1,343 passengers, a crew of 885,
    and 3,814 sacks of mail. There was great
    excitement aboard as the big ship knifed its way
    through the Atlantic at 23 knots, a speed certain
    to set a new crossing record.
  • A few hundred miles past the halfway point,
    lookouts in the crow's nest sighted an iceberg
    less than a quarter mile away. There was no time
    to stop or to swerve. The muffled grinding on
    impact gave little indication that the unsinkable
    Titanic had been fatally wounded.

3
The map from Southampton to New York
New York
Southhampton
4
(No Transcript)
5
An artists impression of the size of the iceberg
that the Titanic hit on April 15, 1912.
6
Captain J. Smith
7
The Facts?
  • When? At 1159 P.M. on Monday,
    April 15, 1912.
  • Shortly after 2
    A.M. the Titanic slid to its watery grave.
  • Where? 1,191 mi. from New York.
  • Who? There were 2228 people on
    board of the Titanic, 337 in first
  • class, 285
    second class, 721 in third class and 885 crew
  • members.
  • The Loss? 1,493 passengers and crewmen
    perished.
  • The Titanic
    had cost more than 8 million.
  • The Survivors? Only 705 Titanic passengers
    survived
  • The Cause? The experts agreed that the
    Titanic's captain, E. J. Smith, must
  • have known of
    iceberg danger at least an hour before the
  • disaster, yet
    there were no orders given to reduce speed. The
  • weather was
    clear and cold with excellent visibility.
    Apparently,
  • to achieve a
    record crossing was very important. The captain,
  • passengers, and
    crew firmly believed the Titanic's publicity,
  • that she was
    unsinkable. All were given the orders of "full
  • speed ahead.
  • What could possibly happen to an
    unsinkable ship?

8
  • The Disaster?
  • It was just before midnight when the iceberg
    was spotted dead ahead, rising 30 metres above
    the surface of the water. Seconds later the
    Titanic rammed with a solid crunch on the
    portside forward, then climbed the submerged
    iceberg, tearing out the forward end of the ship
    below the waterline. The sound was so muffled
    that no one was frightened. After a few minutes,
    the more curious passengers, in a happy mood,
    drifted on deck to look around and reached over
    the bow rail to touch the iceberg. They were
    unaware of a 2nd danger.
  • A fire that had broken out in the coal
    bunkers before leaving Southampton was still not
    extinguished. At 1225am, after having the damage
    assessed, Captain Smith ordered all persons
    assembled on the upper deck. With everyone in
    good spirits, this was accomplished in 15
    minutes. Passengers were informed of what had
    happened and of the captain's decision to abandon
    ship. There was no panic until at 1250am Chief
    Officer Murdock ordered "Crews to the boats!
    Women and children 1st."

9
  • Those in the lifeboats could see that the
    Titanic had sunk 8 10 metres, and her stern was
    out of the water. Lifeboat crews rowed furiously
    toward safety. A mile away from the wounded
    liner, survivors watched the Titanic break in two
    pieces, the forward half slipping beneath the
    surface. For a moment the rear half righted
    itself, then there was another explosion and it
    too began to sink in the icy waters. Survivors
    later
  • reported they could hear
  • the ship's string orchestra
  • playing as the huge bottom
  • section disappeared.

10
The Rescue?
  • Many ships had picked up the Titanic's SOS
    signal "Have struck iceberg. Badly damaged. Rush
    aid." The Carpathia arrived at the scene about 4
    A.M. and took on board such shocked and dazed
    survivors as it could find, then headed for New
  • York. The Carpathia,
  • with 700 survivors
  • aboard, arrived in New
  • York at 9am on April
  • 18.

11
The Discovery?
  • The first
    live Titanic pictures were

  • taken on September 1, 1985, the

  • day the wreckage of the ship was

  • finally discovered. The following year, search
    crews returned to the area armed with a
    submersible vehicle named Alvin.
  • In 1986, in later trips underwater, more
    artefacts were recovered from the wreckage of the
    Titanic. In total, more than 5,000 pieces have
    been recovered from the wreckage site. Today, the
    wreckage of the Titanic is considered by many to
    be a memorial to the lives of the 1,493 people
    who died when the ship sank on an early spring
    morning in 1912.

12
Why is it important to recover and conserve
artefacts from Titanics wreck site?
  • The bottom of the deep ocean is a hostile
    environment. Over time, man-made objects will be
    covered in bacteria, and corroded by salt and
    acids. Even the Titanic is slowly being destroyed
    by iron-eating micro-organisms and will one day
    collapse on the ocean floor. Artefacts that are
    not recovered from the wreck site will eventually
    be lost. RMS Titanic, Inc, is committed to
    recovering, conserving, and exhibiting artefacts
    from Titanics wreck site to help preserve the
    physical memory of the Ship and the people who
    perished in the disaster.

13
The pictures?
14
Crab
15
Your task?
  • Now in your SOSE book, write down the
    following headings and complete the answers using
    the information you have read.
  • Who?
  • What?
  • Where?
  • When?
  • Why?
  • How?
  • 5 Facts?
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