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Titanic sank due to Fire, not Iceberg!
By: Tupaki Desk | 2 Jan 2017 9:24 AM GMTOver 1,500 people died after the World famous 'Titanic' sank during its rnmaiden voyage from Southampton to New York in the 1912. It's been rnbelieved all these days that the ship sank only because it collided rnwith an iceberg. However, A new study proves it wrong.
Journalistrn Senan Molony who has been researching for 30 years to figure out the rnreason behind the disaster claims Titanic sank due to the enormous fire rnin ship's hull not because of iceberg. Upon studying the photographs rnshot by the chief electrical engineers before the shift left Belfast rnshipyard, He reached a conclusion that fire broke out in the hull and rn30-feet-long black marks hints the same. He further says, The disaster rntook place because the same portion which got damaged in fire was rnpierced by the iceberg.
Experts believe the fire might have brokern out in a three-story high fuel store located near the boiler rooms. As rnmany as 12 members tried to put off the fire but it was too big to rncontrol, touching 1,000 degrees celsius. J Bruce Ismay who is the rnpresident of the firm that built Titanic gave strict instructions to rnOfficers not to reveal it to any of the 2,500 passengers. This rnrevelations were presented in the form of a documentary 'Titanic: The rnNew Evidence'.
Journalistrn Senan Molony who has been researching for 30 years to figure out the rnreason behind the disaster claims Titanic sank due to the enormous fire rnin ship's hull not because of iceberg. Upon studying the photographs rnshot by the chief electrical engineers before the shift left Belfast rnshipyard, He reached a conclusion that fire broke out in the hull and rn30-feet-long black marks hints the same. He further says, The disaster rntook place because the same portion which got damaged in fire was rnpierced by the iceberg.
Experts believe the fire might have brokern out in a three-story high fuel store located near the boiler rooms. As rnmany as 12 members tried to put off the fire but it was too big to rncontrol, touching 1,000 degrees celsius. J Bruce Ismay who is the rnpresident of the firm that built Titanic gave strict instructions to rnOfficers not to reveal it to any of the 2,500 passengers. This rnrevelations were presented in the form of a documentary 'Titanic: The rnNew Evidence'.