At a first glance, it looks like something out of a video game... But recent footage captured from the bottom of the North Atlantic ocean of the sunken Titanic is harrowingly real.
The Titanic's shipwreck lies around 12,500 feet below sea level and is a constant reminder of the 1,517 lives that were lost when the vessel struck an iceberg way back on April 15, 1912.
For 73 years, the entire planet was dumbfounded at how something so big and 'unsinkable' - with it being 175 feet tall and 883 feet long - could just disappear.
Countless expeditions were launched by people all around the world exploring the seabed, until Robert Ballard, of Wichita, Kansas, came across it in 1985 - thanks to his pioneering use of deep-diving submersibles.

Since then the rusty, decaying wreck has been explored thousands of times by scientists, explorers and tourists - including OceanGate, the company that owned the ill-fated submersible that imploded on its way to the wreckage in June 2023, taking the lives of all five men onboard.
Now, thanks to Titanic Expedition 2024, a shocking revelation has been made regarding the ship's wreckage thanks to new technology.
The article is not finished. Click on the next page to continue.
The article is not finished. Click on the next page to continue.
Next page