Current:Home > ContactTitanic expedition might get green light after company says it will not retrieve artifacts -消息
Titanic expedition might get green light after company says it will not retrieve artifacts
View
Date:2025-04-16 11:31:02
The U.S. government could end its legal fight against a planned expedition to the Titanic, which has sparked concerns that it would violate a law that treats the wreck as a gravesite.
Kent Porter, an assistant U.S. attorney, told a federal judge in Virginia Wednesday that the U.S. is seeking more information on revised plans for the May expedition, which have been significantly scaled back. Porter said the U.S. has not determined whether the new plans would break the law.
RMS Titanic Inc., the Georgia company that owns the salvage rights to the wreck, originally planned to take images inside the ocean liner's severed hull and to retrieve artifacts from the debris field. RMST also said it would possibly recover free-standing objects inside the Titanic, including the room where the sinking ship had broadcast its distress signals.
The U.S. filed a legal challenge to the expedition in August, citing a 2017 federal law and a pact with Great Britain to treat the site as a memorial. More than 1,500 people died when the Titanic struck an iceberg and sank in 1912.
The U.S. argued last year that entering the Titanic - or physically altering or disturbing the wreck - is regulated by the law and agreement. Among the government's concerns is the possible disturbance of artifacts and any human remains that may still exist on the North Atlantic seabed.
In October, RMST said it had significantly pared down its dive plans. That's because its director of underwater research, Paul-Henri Nargeolet, died in the implosion of the Titan submersible near the Titanic shipwreck in June.
The Titan was operated by a separate company, OceanGate, to which Nargeolet was lending expertise. Nargeolet was supposed to lead this year's expedition by RMST.
RMST stated in a court filing last month that it now plans to send an uncrewed submersible to the wreck site and will only take external images of the ship.
"The company will not come into contact with the wreck," RMST stated, adding that it "will not attempt any artifact recovery or penetration imaging."
RMST has recovered and conserved thousands of Titanic artifacts, which millions of people have seen through its exhibits in the U.S. and overseas. The company was granted the salvage rights to the shipwreck in 1994 by the U.S. District Court in Norfolk, Virginia.
U. S. District Judge Rebecca Beach Smith is the maritime jurist who presides over Titanic salvage matters. She said during Wednesday's hearing that the U.S. government's case would raise serious legal questions if it continues, while the consequences could be wide-ranging.
Congress is allowed to modify maritime law, Smith said in reference to the U.S. regulating entry into the sunken Titanic. But the judge questioned whether Congress can strip courts of their own admiralty jurisdiction over a shipwreck, something that has centuries of legal precedent.
In 2020, Smithgave RMST permission to retrieve and exhibit the radio that had broadcast the Titanic's distress calls. The expedition would have involved entering the Titanic and cutting into it.
The U.S. government filed an official legal challenge against that expedition, citing the law and pact with Britain. But the legal battle never played out. RMST indefinitely delayed those plans because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Smith noted Wednesday that time may be running out for expeditions inside the Titanic. The ship is rapidly deteriorating.
"Personal stories down there"
Last year, new images of the Titanic developed using deep sea mapping revealed unprecedented views of the shipwreck.
The scan was carried out in 2022 by Magellan Ltd, a deep-sea mapping company, in partnership with Atlantic Productions, a London-based company that was making a film about the project.
The scan provides a three-dimensional view of the wreckage in its entirety, enabling the ship once known as "unsinkable" to be seen as if the water has been drained away.
In the debris surrounding the ship, lies miscellaneous items including ornate metalwork from the ship, statues and unopened champagne bottles.
There are also personal possessions, including dozens of shoes.
"I felt there was something much bigger here that we could get from the Titanic," Anthony Geffen, the CEO of Atlantic Production, told CBS News last year. "If we could scan it, if we could capture in all its detail… we could find out how it sank and how the different parts of the boat fell apart and we can find a lot of personal stories down there as well."
Emmet Lyons contributed to this report.
- In:
- RMS Titanic
- Titanic
veryGood! (12424)
Related
- Jorge Ramos reveals his final day with 'Noticiero Univision': 'It's been quite a ride'
- Alec Baldwin Shares He’s Nearly 40 Years Sober After Taking Drugs “From Here to Saturn”
- Trump awarded 36 million more Trump Media shares worth $1.8 billion after hitting price benchmarks
- At least 9 dead, dozens treated in Texas capital after unusual spike in overdoses
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Jeff Daniels loads up for loathing in 'A Man in Full' with big bluster, Georgia accent
- Tesla lays off charging, new car and public policy teams in latest round of cuts
- Ryan Gosling and Mikey Day reprise viral Beavis and Butt-Head characters at ‘Fall Guy’ premiere
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Student protests take over some campuses. At others, attention is elsewhere
Ranking
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- Police storm into building held by pro-Palestinian protesters at Columbia | The Excerpt
- Former students of the for-profit Art Institutes are approved for $6 billion in loan cancellation
- Report: Sixers coach Nick Nurse's frustration over ref's call results in injured finger
- Federal Spending Freeze Could Have Widespread Impact on Environment, Emergency Management
- Increasingly Frequent Ocean Heat Waves Trigger Mass Die-Offs of Sealife, and Grief in Marine Scientists
- The Islamic State group says it was behind a mosque attack in Afghanistan that killed 6 people
- Biden to travel to North Carolina to meet with families of officers killed in deadly shooting
Recommendation
Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
Ford recalls Maverick pickups in US because tail lights can go dark, increasing the risk of a crash
Student protesters reach a deal with Northwestern University that sparks criticism from all sides
Paul Auster, prolific and experimental man of letters and filmmaker, dies at 77
Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
House to vote on expanded definition of antisemitism amid growing campus protests
300 arrested in Columbia, City College protests; violence erupts at UCLA: Live updates
1 person dead, buildings damaged after tornado rips through northeastern Kansas