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Titanic began receiving reports of ice on April 14, but at the time the seas were calm and clear. By 11:30 p.m., a lookout spotted the iceberg (pictured here) that would soon prove to be deadly.
the Titanic sank on April 15 at 2 a.m.). It's unclear why the drill never happened. The ship's lookouts had to rely on their eyesight alone — the ship's binoculars were locked inside a cabinet ...
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Titanic: The science behind the disasterThis means that with clear skies, Titanic’s lookout crew would have had no problem seeing an iceberg well in advance. There are just two problems: the pair of binoculars from the lookout station ...
Albert Akeny "A.A." Stewart was a salesman in Cincinnati and brought three whales to the city. He later died on the Titanic.
Titanic crewmembers spotted an iceberg, but it was too late for the ship to change course. When the ship was about 400 miles southeast of Newfoundland, Canada, the two lookouts, Fredrick Fleet and ...
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