The lights of the Titanic explorers, who were dispatched to investigate the ship’s wreckage, mysteriously went out.

Some continue to explore the dark waters to get a closer look at the infamous ship, while experts continue to confound people with their strange ideas about how to raise the Titanic wreckage from its ultimate resting place in the Atlantic Ocean.

Following its April 1912 sinking, the RMS Titanic has lain around 400 nautical miles southeast of Newfoundland, Canada, and approximately 12,500 feet below ocean level ever since.

Explorers were dispatched to investigate the wreckage of the vessel in 2022. After returning as titanic_fans_official, the since-disabled account @titanicfansofficial posted a video from the voyage to TikTok.

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A person may be heard explaining what one of the explorer’s cameras is capturing in the video.

“Are you able to see the anchor? The focal point anchor?” They make a point. “And the ring on the top.”

But moments later, the lights go out and the wreckage takes on an even more ominous quality.

Another voice says, “We just lost another light,” and that it’s “very spooky” to look at the sight right now.

The ship’s side and the corroded railing are barely visible. Everything else, though, appears to be the start of a more terrifying scenario from Pirates of the Caribbean since it is shrouded in shadow.

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Thank goodness, the light returns and the ship is illuminated once again. The bow, or front, of the ship, where the iconic Jack and Rose scene from the 1997 film starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet, is seen with striking clarity.

The film is only one of innumerable voyages that people have undertaken all across the world to see more closely at the ship that was given the nickname “unsinkable.”

The most recent investigation, known as the Titanic Expedition 2024, entailed using scanning equipment to record the ship and its debris field.

After countless hours of investigation, it was discovered that the ship’s bow had further deteriorated and that a sizable portion, measuring fifteen feet across, had fallen overboard and reached the seabed below.

“We are saddened by this loss and the inevitable decay of the Ship and the debris,” the RMS Titanic Inc. expedition team stated.We shall analyze Titanic’s condition and her developments over time in greater detail over the next weeks and months.

“Although Titanic’s collapse is inevitable, this evidence strengthens our mission to preserve and document what we can before it is too late.”

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