National Geographic Club
Join
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
posted by dragonsmemory
One hundred years ago today, the Tiktanic sank. On her maiden voyage from England to New York, she struck an iceberg. Due to an unlucky combination of circumstances, the ship succumbed to her fate, floating gracefully to the bottom of the frigid Atlanti, where she remains to this day.

Titanic was called "the unsinkable ship." She was large for her time, easily drawing admiration. Yet, she carried fatal flaws in her design. These flaws aided in her death.
Titanic carried lifeboats, but she only had enough for about half of the passengers on board. She did, however, carry the minimum number required by the White Star Line. On the night of April 12, 1912, these lifeboats were barely half filled. Made to carry about thirty people each, many left the doomed ship with a cargo of a dozen or so women and children. Over 1500 people died that night.

When she struck the iceberg, Titanic did not hit it head-on. Rather, she turned to one side, hoping to miss it. As is now common knowledge, 8/9 of an iceberg is invisible underwater. Thus, the berg scraped her side, tearing a massive gash in her hull.
Titanic was equipped with watertight compartments, about a dozen or so. If the ship's hull was breached, these would seal off, containing the water and keeping Titanic afloat. But, of course, that was assuming only one compartment was compromised.
Instead, six of these compartments were breached. As they were designed to do, they sealed themselves off, trapping some of the crew in the engine rooms.
Thhe walls of the compartments did not reach all the way up, leaving a gap at the top. As more of the frigid Atlantic waterpoured in, it spilled over into the other compartments, crippling the ship still further.
As her foresection filled with water, the weight tipped Titanic up into the air. The strain proved to be too much. She snapped in half, sending her aft section plummeting back down to the surface. The ship continued filling with water, sinking nose-first. It took Titanic about two hours to sink.

Many of the hundreds who died that night froze to deathin the frigid water. Others went down with the ship. Some survived. There are few left who can recall those hours on the open sea.
Titanic, darling of the White Star Line, sank without ever completing her maiden voyage. She now rests at the bottom of the Atlantic, her former glory obscured by sea life.




For more information on Titanic as featured in the pages of National Geographic magazine, see the issues listed below.
August 1998
April 2012
1500 years before the construction of the Ming Dynasty wall was constructed, the Han Dynasty defended the borders of China from invaders with a Great Wall of their own.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
history
china
national geographi/youtube
video
national geographic
hummingbirds
wild
Bull sharks can be hard to identify, but they do have these identifying characteristics that set them apart from other sharks.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
animals
sharks
Off the coast of South Africa the sardine run is underway. Sharks, birds and even a surprise guest gorge themselves on thousands of sardines.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
deep sea
sharks
Bull sharks can swim from salt water into fresh water, and on the coast of South of Africa these sharks occasionally encounter Africa's deadliest animal, the hippo.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
bull sharks
hippos
nat geo wild/youtube
video
national geographic
wild
snakes
anaconda
beautiful
love
youtube
video
national geographic
wild
ocean
beautiful
love
animals
added by Dogpaws
youtube
video
national geographic
wild
narwals
beautiful
nature
added by GDragon612
you tube
video
national geographic
heart
human
body
youtube
video
national geographic
vulcanoes
youtube
video
national geographic
black holes
Embark on this virtual reality experience with an international coalition of biologists, geologists, glaciologists, meteorologists, and geographers as they study the effects of climate change in one of the most extreme environments on Earth.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
everest
Immerse yourself with a team of scientists, climbers, and Sherpa guides as they embark on an expedition that will help define our understanding of high-mountain environments.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
everest
Hundreds of millions of people in the Himalayan region rely on glaciers for their water supply. Global climate change is forcing many to leave their homes in search of new beginnings.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
glaciers
More than half of the migratory bird species in North America are declining. In order to conserve these migrating birds, conservation scientist and National Geographic explorer Kristen Ruegg is tracking bird DNA with the Bird Genoscape Project.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
animals
birds
Neil deGrasse Tyson explains the history of the refrigerator and how the ozone was being eaten away by CFC molecules.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
space
cosmos
possible worlds
Join atmospheric and environmental scientist Anton Seimon as he chases extreme weather in the “Tornado Alley” of the Midwest US.
video
national geographic
documentary
earth
tornadoes
video
national geographic
blue whales
animals
wild
video
national geographic
snow leopards
animals
love
wild
INTO THE FIRE follows an all-female team of Yazidi mine clearers in Iraq, working to rid the land of IEDs left behind by ISIS and to heal themselves in the process.
video
national geographic
tv series
into the fire