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3. Time Factor
The Titanic sank in 1912, and the wreck was discovered in 1985, more than 70 years later. Even in shallower water, decades under the ocean would lead to complete decomposition. At the Titanic’s depth, cold temperatures preserve some materials like metal, but human tissue and bones are gradually consumed by microbes over time.
4. Ocean Currents
Strong currents in the North Atlantic can disperse any small remains. Over decades, anything that might have survived could have been carried away, scattered across the ocean floor, or buried under sediment.
5. The Nature of the Disaster
Bottom Line:
The absence of human remains at the Titanic wreck site is not mysterious—it’s the result of deep-sea conditions, scavengers, decomposition, and the passage of time. While the wreck remains a haunting memorial to the lives lost, it is the ocean itself that has claimed the physical traces of the tragedy.
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