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The U. S. Coast Guard The U. S. Department of Health says “suspicious human remains” have been among the wreckage of the submersible Titan.
Debris from the ill-fated submersible came ashore Wednesday in Newfoundland aboard a Canadian-flagged ship that had helped search for the ship in a remote ocean domain near the wreckage of the Titanic.
The Horizon Arctic docked at the port of St. John’s using a remotely operated vehicle, or ROV, which it had searched the ocean floor about 700 kilometers south of Canada’s easternmost province.
The ROV’s owner, Pelagic Research Services, in the United States, said his team had effectively ended offshore operations and would retire the company’s apparatus from Horizon Arctic.
“They have been running 24 hours a day for 10 days, through the physically and intellectually demanding situations of this operation, and are eager to complete the project and get back to their enjoyments,” the company said in an email.
Photos of the dock showed what gave the impression of several pieces of the ship’s elevated submersible, adding the Titan’s conical nose with its unique circular window.
The Titan imploded in its descent on June 18 to the site of the sinking of the Titanic, about 4 kilometers below the surface of the sea, which caused the death of the five passengers and crew.
The U. S. Coast Guard The U. S. Navy declared the men dead Thursday after the ROV shot down the Titan’s wreckage about 500 meters from the bow of the sunken luxury liner.
Stockton Rush, CEO of Titan’s owner OceanGate, blew up the submersible, which carried passengers from British billionaire Hamish Harding, French explorer and Titanic Paul-Henry Nargeolet, and Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his 19-year-old son, Suleman.
The Transportation Safety Board of Canada issued an update late Wednesday, saying its investigators had finished initial interviews with other people aboard the aid ship Polar Prince, which was the Titan’s mother ship and helped free the submersible from its fatal fall.
The security office said the ship’s travel data recorder was sent to a laboratory in Ottawa for analysis.
He said he inspected, documented and cataloged fabrics from the Titan’s sinking and that the fabrics are now owned by the U. S. Coast Guard. U. S.
The U. S. Coast Guard, which is leading the foreign investigation, did not respond to a request for comment on who would read about the debris.
Horizon Maritime, which owns Horizon Arctic and Polar Prince, also declined to comment. Meanwhile, Pelagic said his team members were unable to provide data similar to that of the ongoing investigation due to “confidentiality and the duty of non-disclosure. “
The Canadian Press report first published on June 28, 2023.