Recording captures the chill of the last moments of the Titan diving

Officials say the federal government released a creepy recording of the doomed Titan dive as it erupted in the North Atlantic and killed five people nearly two years ago.
The recordings of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration were conducted by passive acoustic recorders about 900 miles from the Doomsday of the Haimen Ship.
NOAA’s network of marine noise reference stations consists of 13 passive sound monitoring sites in the northeastern United States.
The Coast Guard believed that it was the Titans buckling under the pressure of the water and immediately killed all the giants.
The Coast Guard said that on June 18, 2023, the audio clip “recorded the acoustic signature of the implosion of the Titan’s dive blast.”
Stockton Rush, CEO of Haimengate, is 61, who is driving the Titan; 77-year-old deep-sea explorer Paul-Henri Nargeolet, who is visiting the scene of the Titanic’s wreckage Experienced; British tycoon Hamish Harding, 58; 48-year-old Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his son 19-year-old Suleiman were destined to view the scene of the Titanic wreckage in the North Atlantic, Canada Killed during the journey.
When the ship lost contact with the support ship, sailed for nearly two hours, triggering a crazy search.
The public’s fascination with diving was triggered by reports of “explosions” found, triggering how long passengers can maintain themselves in tubes squeezed out of oxygen to maintain their time.
This article was originally published on nbcnews.com.


