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         Titanic Shipwreck:     more books (100)
  1. Titanic: An Illustrated History by Donald Lynch, Ken Marschall, 2005-04-30
  2. Titanic by Martin Jenkins, 2008-03-25
  3. The Last Days of the Titanic: Photographs and Mementos of the Tragic Maiden Voyage by Edward Eugene O'Donnell, E. E. O'Donnell, et all 1997-11
  4. The Titanic: Lost and Found (Step-Into-Reading, Step 4) by Judy Donnelly, 1987-04-12
  5. Titanic (DK Eyewitness Books) by DK Publishing, 2004-08-02
  6. Titanic: A NonfictionCompanion to Tonight on the Titanic (Magic Tree House Rsrch Gdes(R)) by Will And Ma Osborne, 2002-08-27
  7. Titanic Sinks! (Stepping Stone,paper) by Thomas Conklin, 1997-03-18
  8. Exploring the Titanic: How the greatest ship ever lost -- was found (Scott Foresman Reading Classroom Library (Time Quest Book)) by Robert D. Ballard, 1993-07
  9. Titanic: Fortune and Fate : Letters, Mementos, and Personal Effects from Those Who Sailed on the Lost Ship by The Mariners' Museum, 1998-09-02
  10. Finding the Titanic Level 4 by Robert D. Ballard, 1993-11-01
  11. Titanic (Young Reading Gift Books) by Anna Claybourne, Katie Daynes, 2006-06
  12. Los amantes del 'Titanic'. (Kate Winslet y Leonardo DiCaprio protagonizan histórico naufragio)(TT: The lovers aboard the 'Titanic') (TA: Kate Winslet and ... shipwreck): An article from: Epoca by María Corisco, 1998-01-26
  13. Titanic: el castigo de los dioses. (la historia del desastre maritimo)(TT: Titanic: the wrath of the gods) (the history of the shipwreck): An article from: Epoca by Eva Reuss, 1998-02-02
  14. Shipwrecks: The Sinking of the Titanic and Other Disasters at Sea (Perspectives on History Series)

21. Richard Bailey
webcast director on Cameron’s return expedition to the titanic shipwreck. to the titanic shipwreck for the recent Imax Film Ghosts Of The Abyss .
http://www.cinemaminima.com/blogs/bailey/
Richard Bailey
Independent, social-issue-oriented, low-budget, feature production; especially digital video for theatrical digital projection, and direct-to-video, DVD
May 12, 2004
L.A. Twister Premiere at Grauman's Chinese
L.A. TWISTER Robert Cannon Sven Pape , Producer/Director of the film L.A. TWISTER www.LATWISTERmovie.com , and culminating in the premiere of the movie L.A. TWISTER James Cameron Ghosts of the Abyss The Play L.A. Webcast www.LATWISTERmovie.com directly from the movie section at windowsmedia.com Zack Ward (Lenny) and Tony Daly (Ethan), the lead actors of the film L.A. TWISTER Internet Interaction Tech Overview Panasonic equipment is used primarily. Most importantly are the Panasonic PTZ Cameras are remote-controlled, their movements and camera angles can be pre-programmed and they have motion sensors; this way the camera can track any movement in the theater. They perform extremely well in low light conditions and have a zooming capability that allows them to read what is written on a piece of paper from a distance of 40 feet. There are a total of 5 dome cameras installed plus several other wide angle security cameras that will cover action on stage and throughout the theatre and production offices. Other Panasonic equipment includes the NEX camera and the AGDV DVCAM VTR.

22. Disasters In Nova Scotia - Titanic Shipwrecks Swissair Flight 111 Halifax Explos
Disasters at sea are an historical part of life in Nova Scotia. Read about the Titanic, the Halifax Explosion, Flight 111, the notorious Sable Island and
http://www.highway7.com/links/link-disasters1.html
Nova Scotia's Seacoast Trail home about contact linkup ... guestbook [ links ] Topics picture albums
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history ... writers activities/events activities/events events calendar for visitors accommodations ecotours/tourism tour the shore places attractions beaches/parks nature/outdoors communities business real estate/rentals business resources computers/internet lifestyle sustainable living environmental issues renewables lifestyles ... Highway 7.com 16,500 visitors a month and growing! Need A Website? New for 2005! Small biz, non-profits. YOUR BUSINESS ONLINE starting at $99! Contact Us! Titanic/Swissair/Explosion/Shipwrecks Nova Scotia, with its 4,700 miles of coastline has a history of shipwrecks, including the famous Titanic. Many of the ill-fated passengers of the 'unsinkable' ship Titanic, the Mont Blanc, and Flight 111 found their final resting place in the waters close to Halifax. index of links The Perfect Storm Called the 'perfect storm', the Hallowe'en storm and the 'unnamed storm' because of the speed at which two storm fronts converged, it became another killer storm that took lives. A book and a blockbuster movie "The Perfect Storm" tell the story, but here's what really happened out on the Atlantic. Gloucester Memorial Honours Nova Scotians Massachusetts and Atlantic Canada's seafarers share a common history and often, the same fate on boats lost at sea. More than 1200 Nova Scotians are honoured on Gloucester's 'Fisherman's Memorial'.

23. C02Q057- The Titanic. The World War I
This quatrain refers to the titanic shipwreck on 1912. The Titanic has sunk II, 57 = 57= 5+7 12, 1912, the year of the titanic shipwreck.
http://hospedagem.infolink.com.br/nostradamus/b02q057.htm
Titanic Prev(Loc) Prev(Cent) Local Index Index(cent) ... Next(Loc)
The Titanic. The World War I
Compactl interpretation revised on 07-DEC-2004
There isn't a detailed interpretation in English language for this quatrain yet.
Please refer to the Portuguese Version for the complete interpretation and
the historical follow-up of the facts.
II. 57.
Avant conflit le grand mur tombera,
Nay imparfaict: la plus part nagera,
Aupres du fleuve de sang la terre tainte. II. 57. Before the conflict the great wall will fall,
The great one put to die, death too sudden and lamented, Born imperfect: the major part will swim: Near and before the river of blood that will stain the land This quatrain refers to the Titanic shipwreck on 1912. The Titanic has sunk (relatively) near Nova Scotia two years before the beginning of the World War I. There are two dates implied by the quatrain identification: The first verse says that near and before (aupres) the conflict the great wall will fall. The Great Wall from mythology is the Wall of Titans, or the Titanic. The second verse says that the shipwreck would happen suddenly and would be a lamented tragedy.

24. U.S. Signs International Agreement To Protect Titanic Wreck Site
June 18 that will lead to increased protection of the RMS Titanic wreck site by regulating salvage operations and other dives to the titanic shipwreck.
http://japan.usembassy.gov/e/p/tp-20040621-06.html
Home American Citizen Services Visas to the U.S. American Centers Topic Index U.S. Politics Press Releases Ambassador Baker By Region Japan dummytitle Iraq dummytitle Korea dummytitle China dummytitle Afghanistan dummytitle Middle East dummytitle Security Issues Terror dummytitle Arms Control dummytitle Depleted Uranium dummytitle United Nations dummytitle Summits dummytitle Economic Issues Intl. Trade dummytitle Investment dummytitle Anti-corruption dummytitle IP dummytitle Global Affairs Human Rights dummytitle Health dummytitle Women dummytitle Children dummytitle Monthly Archive Consulates Osaka dummytitle Nagoya dummytitle Fukuoka dummytitle Sapporo dummytitle Naha dummytitle American Centers Tokyo dummytitle Kansai dummytitle Nagoya dummytitle Fukuoka dummytitle Sapporo dummytitle
U.S. Signs International Agreement to Protect Titanic Wreck Site The United States signed an international agreement on June 18 that will lead to increased protection of the RMS Titanic wreck site by regulating salvage operations and other dives to the Titanic shipwreck. Under the agreement, which was negotiated with Canada, France, and the United Kingdom beginning in 1997, the Titanic is designated as an international maritime memorial, recognizing the people who perished and whose remains should be given appropriate respect.

25. Reading Well: Hello Reader
Level 4; titanic shipwreck, Exc, $3.00. 51136, Finding the Titanic, Ballard, Robert D. 1993, Scholastic, P, Hello Reader! Level 4; titanic shipwreck
http://www.readingwell.com/hello reader.html
The Reading Well
Used, Rare and Out-Of-Print Books Hello Reader series Return to
Home Page

Title Author Yr Publisher Cover Notes Cond Price Teach Us, Amelia Bedelia Parish, Peggy Scholastic P VG Teach Us, Amelia Bedelia Parish, Peggy Scholastic P Hello Reader! Evel 4 Amelia Bedelia story Exc Classroom Pet, The Maccarone, Grace Scholastic P Hello Reader! First-Grade Friends Level 1 Exc Recess Mess Maccarone, Grace Scholastic P Hello Reader! First-Grade Friends Level 1 Exc Three Wishes, The Stamper, Judith Bauer Scholastic P Hello Reader! Funny Tale Phonics Gr. 1 VG Three Wishes, The Stamper, Judith Bauer Scholastic P Hello Reader! Funny Tale Phonics Gr. 1 activities done VG Mystery of the Missing Dog Levy, Elizabeth Scholastic P Hello Reader! Invisible Inc. #02 VG Mystery of the Missing Dog Levy, Elizabeth Scholastic P Hello Reader! Invisible Inc. #02 VG Schoolyard Mystery, The Levy, Elizabeth Scholastic P Hello Reader! Invisible Inc. #02 Exc Snack Attack Mystery, The

26. FatBabies Dot Com :: View Topic - Are Sony's Days As A Major Industry Player Beh
After the recent titanic shipwreck like announcements from Sony. The question I would like to ask all you testers is Are Sony s days numbered or what?
http://www.fatbabies.com/phpbb/viewtopic.php?p=52986&

27. MATE - Expedition Log
(~3800m) in the North Atlantic to the world s most famous shipwreck, the RMS Titanic. in Stephen s expedition to image the famous titanic shipwreck.
http://www.marinetech.org/nine_degrees/expedition.php?phase=log&date=943257600&b

28. Down, Down To The Titanic, Michael Manyak, Notre Dame Magazine Online - Universi
Since its discovery by noted marine geologist Robert Ballard in 1985, fewer than 100 people have viewed the titanic shipwreck firsthand. On August 17, 2000,
http://www.nd.edu/~ndmag/w2002-03/manyak.html
Magazine Services ND Alumni Home ... Winter 2002-03 Issue Down, Down to the Titanic By Michael Manyak. M.D., '73 In the event of an underseas accident in our submersible, we were told, a small leak at the depth at which the Titanic lies would shoot a stream so intense it would cut a person in half. But don't worry, we were counseled. Before that could happen the capsule would implode with such force that our bodies would instantly incinerate before being crushed. Our fireproof jumpsuits were merely to allow identification of our charred remains. Two summers ago I was asked to provide medical services for a salvage expedition to the wreck site of the RMS Titanic in the North Atlantic. In return I would receive a two-week ringside seat at the salvage operation, with the potential to visit the

29. Putting "Professional" Into Shipwreck Exploration - Odyssey Marine Exploration
As evidenced by Oceaneering s contracts this year on the Titanic, Hunley, Cameron s famous threehour titanic shipwreck exploration promotional piece,
http://shipwreck.net/gsarticle07.html
Articles Authored by Greg Stemm
September Issue 2000 - UNDERWATER MAGAZINE
Putting "Professional" into Shipwreck Exploration
by Greg Stemm

Editors Note: The world of shipwreck exploration has grown from romantic fantasy to a serious underwater contracting industry. IN this issue's column, ProSEA's Greg Stemm advocates the need for professionalism and credibility among contractors already engaged in the industry, and advises those not involved to pay attention to a rapidly growing and profitable venture. To most serious offshore technology companies, shipwrecks are like auto accidents. You know you shouldn't let them distract you, but they are so fascinating, it's hard to ignore them. Most of my friends in the deep ocean business have their favorite story about the crazy guy that called up and offered them the opportunity to get involved with a shipwreck project that sounds something like this:
  • "Nazi Gold" (We really had a witness that saw the gold being loaded! He died last month, but…);
  • "Lost Spanish Treasure" (We found documents in the archives that prove everyone else has looked in the wrong place);
  • "The Secret Cargo" (These priceless jewels were so secret that no one else ever even knew they existed!)
  • 30. Shipwreck Central - Live Dive Blog: Comment On Titanic
    Shipwreck Central Live Dive Blog. Comments Titanic.
    http://www.shipwreckcentral.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-comments.cgi?entry_id=185

    31. Today In Technology History - Apr 15
    Click here for the homepage of the company that has salvage rights for the titanic shipwreck. Use these links to read about and see pictures of the
    http://www.tecsoc.org/pubs/history/2002/apr15.htm
    Today in Technology History (To receive "Today in Technology History" by e-mail, click here To read past issues click here April 15 Ninety years ago, R.M.S. Titanic sank to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean. Titanic has been the subject of countless books, songs, Web sites and movies, so you are probably already familiar with the story. The huge ship, promoted as "unsinkable," scraped against an iceberg late on the night of April 14, 1912. As the ship began to sink, passengers rushed to the upper decks. Unfortunately, while there were enough flotation belts for everyone on board, Titanic didn't have enough lifeboats for all the passengers and many of the ship's lifeboats were deployed with room to spare. Early on the morning of April 15, 1912 about three hours after hitting the iceberg Titanic went under. Of the roughly 2,200 people aboard, about 1,500 were killed that night mostly from hypothermia or drowning in the icy water. The sinking of Titanic continues to grip the public imagination more than any other shipwreck, even though there have been several deadlier maritime disasters. Part of the lasting allure of the Titanic tragedy is its symbolism: a proud achievement, representative of man's ingenuity and believed to be infallible, is destroyed in a moment. (The tragedy found its way thus into a

    32. Reuters.com/news_article.jhtml?type=sciencenews&am
    ICI News Archive Titanic Exhibition Supported by ICI the biggest collection ever presented - from the titanic shipwreck. The Titanic was a British passenger liner - the largest ship in the world when built
    http://reuters.com/news_article.jhtml?type=sciencenews&StoryID=1689155

    33. Our Planet's Ocean Floor -- Private Property?
    A federal judge on Tuesday blocked plans for a deepsea sightseeing expedition this summer to the titanic shipwreck. Judge J. Calvitt Clarke Jr. barred
    http://www.progress.org/archive/ocean03.htm
    Our Planet's Ocean Floor Private Property?
    U.S. judge tells British firm it cannot sponsor sightseeing dives in international waters
      Who owns the oceans? Apparently private companies think they do. As one commentator put it, "Next, the US courts will rule that one may not approach the Moon without prior agreement of the US."
    NORFOLK, Va. A federal judge on Tuesday blocked plans for a deep-sea sightseeing expedition this summer to the Titanic shipwreck. Judge J. Calvitt Clarke Jr. barred anyone from coming within several miles of the wreck or taking photographs or videotape of it without permission of R.M.S. Titanic Inc., which has owned the ship's salvage rights since 1994. The company's attorney, F. Bradford Stillman, said Clarke's ruling was needed to preserve the famous shipwreck. Deep Ocean Expeditions Ltd. will appeal the ruling barring it from ferrying adventurers to the wreck site in the north Atlantic. Ann K. Sullivan, an attorney for the British company, said the U.S. court has no jurisdiction over the wreck in international waters. It also cannot control public picture-taking at the historic site, some 400 miles off the Newfoundland coast and 2 1/2 miles deep, she said. "The law of the sea requires freedom of navigation and freedom to exploit the sea's resources," Sullivan said. "If we want to go down and visit the ship, that's part of freedom of navigation."

    34. News Content
    The bodies of two victims of the 1912 titanic shipwreck exhumed in Canada Friday will never be positively identified, according to researchers here.
    http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/en/doc/2001-05/21/content_58336.htm
    contact us about us Home BizChina ... Edu news... ... Focus on... ... Experts fail to identify two exhumed Titanic victims
    The bodies of two victims of the 1912 Titanic shipwreck exhumed in Canada Friday will never be positively identified, according to researchers here. The bone fragments of two Titanic victims, one man and one woman, exhumed from a cemetery here were too degraded to permit identification via DNA tests, according to Nancy Angus, a researcher at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario. The researchers are now focusing their efforts on the remains of a third exhumed body, thought to belong to a small boy around the age of two. Of the 1,480 victims of the April 14, 1912 shipwreck, 121 are buried in Halifax's Fairview cemetery. Of the victims, 43 have never been conclusively identified. The Lakehead researchers, joined by their colleagues from Laurentienne University in Sudbury, Ontario, launched the project with a team of Halifax-based experts at the request of families hoping to confirm their links with the identified shipwreck victims. While two of the bodies were too decomposed for identification by genetic testing, the little boy's remains were found to be in better condition. Researchers hope to be able to identify him from bone fragments, in an analysis that could take as long as six months, said project leader Alan Ruffman.

    35. Speaker Profile - Dr. Joseph MacInnis
    As the first Canadian to dive down to the titanic shipwreck, Joseph MacInnis is a medical doctor and noted deepsea explorer. Consultant to the Titanic
    http://www.nsb.com/speakerbio.asp?i_speakerid=100

    36. HBO Forums
    as she started to New York with the survivors of the titanic shipwreck. The story of the Titanic starts berth 44, in Southampton, England.
    http://boards.hbo.com/thread.jspa?threadID=302&start=15&tstart=0

    37. FreeLists / Nethappenings / RESOUR> [NetGold] EXPLORATION: Titanic Rusticles
    A shorter URL for the above article http//snurl.com/2kft Tiny microbes are at work 3800 meters under the sea at the site of the titanic shipwreck.
    http://www.freelists.org/archives/nethappenings/10-2003/msg00025.html

    nethappenings
    Date Prev 10-2003 Date Index Date Next ... Thread Next
    • From To Date : Tue, 7 Oct 2003 09:19:50 -0500
    http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/ http://snurl.com/2kft http://www.cheminst.ca/ncw/articles/1994_titanic_e.html http://www.euronet.nl/users/keesree/rusticle.htm > Final resting place of the Titanic: Location: 1,000 miles due east of Boston, Massachusetts, and 375 miles southeast of St. John's, Newfoundland. Depth: 12,500 feet. Bow Section: 4143'57" N, 4956'49" W. Stern Section: 4143'35" N, 4956'54" W. Boilers: 4143'32" N, 4956'49" W. The Titanic now rests 3,800 m below the surface in the Atlantic Ocean, and she has some amazing chemical reactions going on around her. The Titanic is corroding and very interesting corrosion products are being discovered. The structure, chemistry and mineralogy of the corrosion products are allowing scientists to gain insight into the geochemistry of iron and other metals that were accidentally introduced into this deep sea environment. Ashes to Ashes Rust to Rust < http://www.exn.ca/titanic/eatingtitanic.cfm

    38. Titanic
    titanic Ship of Dreams, The Unsinkable Ship, and now the Most Famous shipwreck of All. titanic will never be forgotten.
    http://www.shipwrecktreasures.com/Titanic.htm
    Shipwreck Treasures Home Interested in other Shipwrecks?
    Visit these other fine Shipwreck Treasures sites...
    Titanic Shipwreck
    Titanic: "Ship of Dreams", "The Unsinkable Ship", and now the "Most Famous Shipwreck of All". Known by many different names, the Titanic will never be forgotten.
    Titanic set off from the docks of Southampton in early April 1912, on it's maiden voyage, carrying 2,220 passengers. While speeding toward New York City, the Titanic struck an iceberg only minutes before midnight on April 14. Titanic was swallowed by the sea in less than three hours. 1,513 passengers died with her that night. Titanic is now at the bottom of the sea, but the dreadful occurrences of April 14, 1912 live on in the minds and hearts of us all. Now you can read more of the history of the Titanic as well as shop for the many collectible items available for this most famous of shipwrecks. Titanic History Titanic Memorabilia Links Contact Us Shipwreck Treasures
    237 Old San Carlos Blvd.

    39. CNN - Titanic Monument To A Shipwreck Survivor - January 19, 1998
    CNN
    http://www.cnn.com/TRAVEL/NEWS/9801/19/molly.brown.house/index.html
    The Molly Brown house museum in Denver
    The 'Unsinkable' Molly Brown
    Titanic monument to shipwreck survivor popular in Denver
    January 19, 1998
    Web posted at: 12:37 p.m. EDT (1237 GMT) DENVER (CNN) It's one of those tourist attractions that seems out of place. In the Rocky Mountain West 2,000 miles from the Atlantic Ocean stands a monument to one of the greatest disasters at sea: the sinking of the Titanic. But the historic mansion and museum in downtown Denver have some strong ties to the White Star Line's "unsinkable" luxury ship. At one time, the Molly Brown House Museum was the fashionable home of one of the sunken ship's most famous survivors. Molly Brown represents sort of the American dream," said Leigh Grinstead, the museum's director. "She was a fairly poor working class girl who came and married well. He struck it rich." In the late 1800s, the Browns made their fortune from gold discovered high in the Colorado mountains. In 1894, the family settled in Denver. Molly Brown lived on and off in the Victorian mansion until her death in 1932. The house was restored in the 1970s to look as it did when the Browns lived in it, and today, it is one of Denver's top tourist attractions.

    40. Shipwreck Treasures: The Titanic History
    titanic Ship of Dreams , The Unsinkable Ship , and now the Most Famous shipwreck of All . Known by many different names, the titanic will never be
    http://www.shipwrecktreasures.com/titanics_history.htm
    Shipwreck Treasures Home Interested in other Shipwrecks?
    Visit these other fine Shipwreck Treasures sites...
    "Deeply regret advise you Titanic sank this morning, after collision with iceberg, resulting in serious loss of life. Full particulars later." This was the message sent to the White Star Lines New York office from the Carpathia, as she started to New York with the survivors of the Titanic Shipwreck.
    The story of the Titanic starts berth 44, in Southampton, England. After four days of hiring crew members, loading supplies and making the final inspections, passengers started boarding on the morning of April 10. By noon, tugs pull the Titanic into open water for the start of her maiden voyage. She proceeds to Cherbourg, France and then to Queenstown, Ireland to pick up additional passengers. April 11, 1912 started with an emergency rehearsal with alarm bells and a gradual descent of the watertight doors. With the final passengers on board, the anchor is raised at 1:30 pm and the Titanic heads to sea with 2,227 passengers and crew. The ship performs beautifully, found to be extremely stable. Congratulations pour in by radio from other ships, often with warnings of icebergs ahead.

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