tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN June 22, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT
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is having this large field of competitors helping or hurting right now? when you put all of it together. when it comes to trump. i guess if you add them all together. >> if you add them all together, look, you can't just add them all together and face them up against trump because trump is going to win some of those people who are voting for ron desantis. but if you do look at the polling that matches up trump against the entire field versus trump just versus desantis you do see when you only poll trump and desantis trump's lead does fall by eight points. so it does seem to me that trump is being helped by this larger field. if the race does in fact get closer than it is right now, i think that desantis would very much like those other republicans to get out of the race. >> yeah. well, we'll see what happens. all right. thanks very much, harry enten. >> thank you. >> and thanks very much to all of you for being with us. "ac 360" starts now. and good evening from st. john's, newfoundland. a sad and somber evening here.
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this is where five explorers and would-be explorers first set off on friday, out into the open ocean, traveling some 460 miles from here toward the wreck of the rms titanic. then on sunday morning they were sealed inside the submersible tight sxn lowered into the ocean for their descent to the seabed some 13,000 feet below, about two miles. less than two hours later communication, as you know, was lost with the submersible and we just learned it was about that time a senior navy official tells cnn that a navy network of underwater sensors picked up sounds consistent, they said, with an implosion but that it was determined to be, quote, not definitive, unquote. well, this afternoon we learned the worst. >> this morning an r.o.v., or remote operated vehicle, from the vessel horizon arctic discovered the tail cone of the titan submersible approximately 1600 feet from the bow of the
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titanic on the sea floor. the r.o.v. subsequently found additional debris. in consultation with experts from within the unified command the debris is consistent with the catastrophic loss of the pressure chamber. >> and that the rear admiral said caused titan to implode. the remote operating vehicle which located the titan had sonar on it, arms and a camera. it first spotted titan's nose cone in that larger debris field that he talked about that was some 1600 feet away from the bow of the titanic. and then there was a second smaller debris field where they found the aft of the hull, the pressure hull. when asked whether the vessel had perhaps struck wreckage from the titanic or been damaged somehow on the ocean floor, the rear admiral said the area around that large debris field
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was smooth. when asked about the precise timing of the catastrophic implosion as they're calling it, he said it was too early to tell. now, aboard the vessel two deep sea pioneers, paul-henri nargeolet, a veteran of dozens of dives to the titanic. he was 77, widely regarded as an expert on the titanic. also stockton rush, 61, the founder of oceangate expeditions and creator of the titan. also lost aboard, 58-year-old pilot and aerial adventurer hamish harding and british pakistani billionaire shahzada dawood, who was 48 years old, and his 19-year-old son suleman. now, there is no good news in what happened at all, but perhaps some comfort for the loved ones of those now lost that according to long-time navy physician dr. eileen marty, who we'll speak with shortly, the implosion that took their lives would have happened many times faster than the human brain could have even detected it, let alone experienced fear. in just a moment we'll talk to titanic director james cameron, who himself has made 33 dives to the titanic. he joins us. but first cnn's miguel marquez
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with more on what we now know. miguel, you have been covering this really from the beginning. it is the worst possible findings. >> there was so much hope. there was slivers of it but people really clung to it here in st. john's and around the world. it was amazing to see how this story struck such a nerve. but sadly i think most people i was talking to didn't believe there could be that miracle and was afraid that there was a catastrophic event like this. and today it was confirmed. >> and the newest information we just got from that defense official was that some sort of sonar equipment did hear some sort of a sound that could be the implosion around the time -- they began listening aas soon as they learned there was a problem. >> presumably this technology picks it up automatically. it is meant to be a defense system. it's very unclear what exactly that defense system is. but it is amazing they picked it
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up. so an hour and 45 into a nine-hour dive or so they were very deep by that time. the defense department picks up this -- >> they were closer to the titanic than they were to the surface. >> much closer. so it implodes at that point, bursts into pieces essentially and the way the coast guard described it today, it showered down basically where they were headed, to the titanic itself, narrowly missing the hull of the titanic. >> the rear admiral talked about this a little bit, they're already starting in the next 24 hours to send away -- there were nan ships on site. they're starting to send those away. medical personnel as well. but they're going to continue for now with the r.o.v. under the water searching the debris field. >> it sounds like they want to map the debris field, understand where all the pieces are. they may try to bring some pieces up. i think they really -- as we know, this was a controversial sub, some called it experimental. it had gone down to the titanic many times successfully.
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but they want to know what went wrong and what it was that caused that catastrophic failure in this -- it is amazing to think in 1912 the titanic sank and now in 2023 you have more people's lives being claimed right at the site of the titanic. they'd really like to understand that. they'd also like to recover remains if possible. but given the implosion, given the violent nature of this event, that may be impossible. >> yeah, it's very unlikely, we've talked to experts, and we'll talk to dr. marty later on, unlikely that there would be any bodies or even bones at this point. but we'll learn more about that obviously in the days ahead. but obviously the families would like to recover what they can and bring their loved ones home. miguel, thank you so much. appreciate it. we have been focusing on this now for several days, and joining us right now is james cameron, diver, explorer, director of "the abyss," a deep sea thriller and most famously of course "titanic" as well as well as many other great films.
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james, i appreciate you joining us. someone who's devoted his life to exploration as you have in many wasz under the sea, i'm wondering what's going through your mind tonight. >> well, thanks, anderson. i mean, obviously we're all -- we're all kind of heartsick from the outcome of this. and i've been living with it for a few days now as some of my other colleagues in the deep submergence community. i was out on a ship myself when the event happened on sunday. the first i heard of it was monday morning. i immediately got on my network because it's, you know, a very small community in the deep submergence group. and found out some information within about a half hour that they had lost coms and they had lost tracking sometimeimultaneo. the only scenario i could come up with in my mind that could account for that was an implosion, a shock wave event so powerful that it actually took out a secondary system that has its own pressure vessel and its own battery power supply, which is the transponder that the ship uses to track where the sub is.
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so i was thinking implosion then. that's monday morning. i got on the horn again with some other people, tracked down some intel that was probably of a military origin although it could have been research because there are hydrophones all over the atlantic, and got confirmation that there was some kind of loud noise consistent with an implosion event. that seemed to me enough confirmation that i let all of my inner circle of people know that we had lost our comrades, and i encouraged everybody to raise a glass in their own on monday. then i watched over the ensuing days this whole sort of everybody running around with their hair on fire search, knowing foul well that it was futile. hoping against hope that it was wrong but knowing in my bones that i wasn't. and so it certainly wasn't a surprise today. and i just feel terrible for the families that had to go through all of these false hopes that kept getting dangled, you know,
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as it played out. >> i just wanted to -- you said it was on monday that you learned of these listening devices under the water picked up the sound of an implosion? or what was -- >> that's, yeah, as it came to me. now, that's hearsay, multiple -- they were credible sources. you know, i took that as a factor that i multiplied in with the other factors. and i couldn't think of any other scenario in which a sub would be lost where it lost coms and navigation at the same time and stayed out of touch and did not surface. i was also told, and i don't have confirmation on this, that they had -- they were on descent, they were a couple hundred meters above the sea floor, and they dropped their weights. now, the only way for the ship to know that they had dropped their ascent weights, which would be an emergency abort, is if they had called that in that
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they were ascending. so i believe now that they had some warning, that they heard some acoustic signature of the hull beginning to delaminate, and investigation will hopefully eventually show what did happen because we all need to know as we go forward. the deep submergence community needs to know exactly what happened. >> you've made dozens of just extraordinary deep water expeditions including more than 30 to the titanic itself. you've also gone far deeper than the 13,000 feet where the titanic is. i think you've gone deeper than just about anybody into the ocean. i forgot the name of the place you went but the challenger deep but -- >> challenger deep, yeah. >> you went in your own design -- yeah, you went in your own designed craft that was a submersible that was experimental and didn't go through sort of the standard safety protocol. the difference is you were not
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taking passengers on board. >> exactly. >> would you ever have taken passengers on board a submersible that had not gone through the standard maritime safety protocols? >> no. not at all. i mean, my sub that i went to the challenger deep dove safely three times deeper than titanic. we made multiple dives in that sub. that sub was a single seater. and it was only contemplated that myself and the engineer with whom i co-designed the vehicle would be the only pilots of that sub. and we worked on it for seven years. we knew every detail of it intimately. i was involved in every phase of the testing. so you know, i assessed the risks. i understood them very well. and those were risks i was willing to take. i would never take it upon myself to ask someone else to take that type of risk. and if i were designing a multiseat vehicle where i intended to be the pilot we'd go through all of the rigorous test protocols and review protocols that you have with, let's say,
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a.b.s., which is the american bureau of shipping, or dnv or german lloyds, who are the major bureaus that class a sub. they call it classing. but it's basically certification. and i think it was unconscionable that this group did not go through that rigorous process. >> this was an experimental design, there's no question about it. it's a carbon composite. you can tell us more about what that actually means. it's the kind of stuff used in spacecraft. but is it designed for deep underwater pressure? and what is the danger of that kind of material in this kind of environment? >> it's completely inappropriate for a vessel that sees external pressure. you know, carbon fiber composites are used very, very successfully for internal pressure, pressure vessels like let's say a scuba tank. and you can get two or three times multiple of what you could get out of steel or aluminum for
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that type of pressure bottle. but for something that's seeing external pressure all of the advantages of composite materials go away and all the disadvantages come into play. so if you're using a uniform material like steel or titanium or ceramic or acrylic, you can do computer modeling with a high degree of accuracy and confidence. the second you start doing carbon composite or any kind of composite materials you're introducing two materials that are in contact with each other. the filament itself and then the epoxy matrix that it sits within. and at that point you have degradation failure. so we always understood that this was the wrong material for submersible hulls because with each pressure cycle you can have progressive damage. so it's quite insidious. because you may have a number of successful dives, which is what happened here, and then have it fail later.
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if i were diving in a sub that was fully certified, i wouldn't think about it. but aen in my own sub, which had a steel hull, i knew that if i dove several, two or three times it was probably good to go because you could cycle steel hundreds of times if not thousands of times. but that's not the case with xhz. so composite. it's quite insidious. and that i think lulled them into a sense of confidence and led to this tragedy. but these are known things. they're known within the engineering community. >> i also want to point out oceangate's former director of operations he wrote in 2018 he focused his criticisms on the company's sedation to rely on acoustic monitoring of the sounds the hull made under pressure as opposed to a scan of the hull. according to him the company claimed no equipment existed that could perform that kind of a scan on the five-inch-thick carbon fiber hull. >> yeah. >> i know it's difficult to say obviously without reading the report. but i'm wondering what you make of that because it seems like this company was making a big
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deal about the sensors they had that could sense a problem with the hull and if they could sense there was a problem then they would have time to turn around and go back up. clearly they didn't. >> it's a bit like saying we have a bit of a poor design for the engine in our jet or our rocket ship but we have a sensor that will tell us if it's on fire. to me that's cold comfort. and i think that if you're building a hull where you need to have sensors to tell you that it's failing in the process of failing, you have no business designing subs or being in that sub. they touted it i believe, you know, as a good thing, as a safety protocol. but i consider it a bad thing because it sheds a light directly on the fundamental flaw of their design. you have to remember the dna of this design concept goes back farther. it goes back to the quest to go to the challenger deep that i was involved in obviously. and there was another sub design
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that was competing with ours at the time that was based on a wound filament composite cylinder with two titanium end caps. and i told those guys point blank, you're going to get killed in that thing. and they ultimately never dove it. i literally told the guy who bought the sub when its owner steve fossett, the famous billionaire, died in a plane crash and the sub was then purchased by another guy to operate it. and i told him you're going to die down there if you dive that thing. and i felt very strongly about it. i had nothing to do with oceangate and i never tried to warn stockton rush of the same thing because i thought maybe they've solved it, you know. but i was pretty opinionated about it at the time. and they had a similar idea of doing acoustic sensors too. they call it delamination when water ingress starts to force the layers of the fibers apart. and theoretically you can hear it. i actually believe they heard it with their ears, not through the sensor system, in the last moments of their lives.
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and that's quite a horrifying prospect. >> james cameron, if you could just stay with us. we're going it take a quick break. i'd lake to continue the conversation. if you can. later we'll also have more not titan's development and especially the selling of it as james was just saying as a safe way to experience the deep. we'll be right back. (vo) crabfest is back at red lobster. when you can choose your crab, and one of three new flavors like roasted garlic butter... ...this is not your grandpa's crabfest... ...unless grandpa's got flavor. dayumm! crabfest is here for a limited time. welcome to fun dining.
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from st. john's newfoundland where the submersible titan first went out to sea on its way to the titanic. we're talking today about the five lives lost, also about the vessel itself and the questions surrounding it, namely the decision to build it out of carbon composite and not certify its safety as other such vessels are. back with deep sea explorer and "titanic" director james cameron. it's extraordinary to me that this debris field is just 1600 feet away from the bow of the "titanic." obviously, people think of the bow of the titanic and they think of your film "titanic" with that iconic scene on the bow. i heard you earlier kind of talk about these two captains and kind of a similarity that you see. and i'm wondering if you could talk about that. >> i think there's a great almost surreal irony here, which
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is titanic sank because the captain took it full steam into an ice field at night on a moonless night with very poor visibility. after he had been repeatedly warned by telegram by marconi gram, by radio during the day that that was ahead of him. and i think we're also seeing a parallel here with unheeded warnings about a sub that was not certified where the entire deep submergence community -- or not the entire community but a large number of them got together to write a letter to oceangate, the company, and say we believe that this could lead to catastrophe. it was less a criticism of the engineering than of the process. but it con tem plaipted the fact the engineering problem wouldn't pass muster from a certification bureau. and so they were trying to head this whole thing off. it was our worst nightmare. i mean, all of us in the deep
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submergence community, people like myself that pilot subs and design subs, implosion is obviously the specter that looms over us all the time. but because of that that's the thing that you engineer for the most, years in advance. so that should never be the problem. i've never believed that if i was going to have a serious problem in a sub that it would be implosion. maybe entanglement in a fishing net. maybe a fire from the electronics. hard to rule those things out. implosion, absolutely not. especially with modern finite element analysis and computer-aided design. >> do you -- i mean, what should be -- what should we learn from this? because obviously deep water exploration -- i mean, there's a pretty great -- i don't know if it's great but a very good safety record with people who have done the certification, people who have really studied
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this. >> it's phenomenal -- >> do you worry about this having impact on the continued exploration? >> i do. look, i'm not worried about exploration because explorers will go. and i'm not worried about innovation because people will innovate. i'm worried that it has a negative impact on, let's say, citizen explorers, tourists, you know. but these are serious people with serious curiosity willing to put serious money down to go to these interesting places. and i don't want to discourage that. but i think that it's almost now a lesson, the takeaway is make sure if you're going to go into a vehicle, whether it's an aircraft or a surface craft or a submersible that it's been through certifying agencies. you know, that it's been signed off. every day we trust our lives to engineering. we step into an elevator. we make an assumption that somebody somewhere has done the math properly and it's all been certified properly. we should take the same precautions when we get into a submersible. even if it's at a resort and we're only going down 300 feet. or 1,000 feet. you know, i'm a partner in a
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submersible company called triton. i'll say that up front. trait triton, not titan. and triton has a perfect operational safety record across 20 vehicles and 10,000 hours of people diving to depths up to 1,000 meters. it can be done. but it requires rigor. and i think all of us in the community now, now our worst fears have happened and we know why it happened i think largely, you know, it puts us now on even more alert to be disciplined and to really think about the ethics of it. you know, there's a lot of countries where subs are diving all over the world. you're not going to have regulation everywhere that solves this problem. it's really more that we have to accept a standard of practice that we don't encourage operators to work without proper a.b.s. or german lloyds or whatever it is certification.
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>> the coast guard rear admiral today was talking about the unforgiving environment at those depths. can you just talk about that feeling of being down there? i can't believe how deep you have gone into the ocean. three times deeper than the titanic, i think you said. >> yeah. >> what is that feeling of being down there? >> well, i always say you'd have to take a backshow with you to go deeper than i went anywhere on this planet. that is a feeling of remoteness. i knew when i made that dive that there was no hope of rescue. there literally was no vehicle in the world no matter if you could fly it in, no matter if i could survive long enough on my life support system, there was no rescue. i had to self-rescue if i had a problem. and we thought about that for the seven years that we spent building the sub. and i designed a lot of the safety systems myself, knowing i was going to be in that sub in terms of how to drop the weights, if i was incapacitated the weights would drop themselves after a certain
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period of time. many, many communications beacons for when i got back to the surface if i had drifted off someplace. i'd have been picked up by satellite. they would have reported my position. i had radio. i had visual beacons. it wouldn't have required an aircraft search. they'd have found me pretty quickly. so you think all that stuff through. but the feeling in the moment, it's almost a sacred space. it's a place where there's nobody else there, it's just you, you and yourself and a sense of deep time. you're looking at something that no one's ever seen. it's been that way for hundreds of millions if not billions of years. at titanic it's different. you feel the presence of the tragedy. you know, and i think that's the allure. i think that's why people want to go and experience it for themselves. to feel -- to remember history. you know. i think people go to battlefields, to gettysburg, to you know, normandy beach and all
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those things to remember history and to take it in and make it part of their lives. i don't think that's -- i don't think there's anything wrong with that. some people don't like -- they say it's a grave site and that sort of thing. but i think it's important for us to remember. but here's a case starkly today where the collective we didn't remember the lesson of titanic, these guys at oceangate didn't, because the arrogance and the hubris that sent that ship to its doom is exactly the same thing that sent those people in that sub to their fate. and i just think it's heartbreaking. i think it's heartbreaking that it was so preventable. >> james cameron, i'm sorry we're talking under these circumstances, but i appreciate the level of detail and expertise that you bring to the conversation. so thank you very much. >> well, thank you, anderson. it's been a pleasure. >> all right. wish you well. still ahead tonight we're going to look at the effort to recover the wreckage. and i'll speak with a retired navy physician about what likely happened to those aboard the submersible during the implosion.
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we were just speaking with director james cameron about the dangers associated with visiting the titanic wreckage, specifically the dangers of the carbon fiber composite used to make the titan submersible. one of the challenges now trying to retrieve the wreckage of it, joining me now is robert mefter, founder and senior salvage master at northwest maritime consultants. robert, i appreciate you being with us. how -- if they choose to try to bring up some of the material to try to understand exactly what happened, what kind of resources would be needed to salvage the remaining parts of that vessel?
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>> well, there's a number ever vehicles and vessels that are available. some are on site. some of the factors that causes the problem is the surface condition. it's the worst weather they've had in 40 years in the north sea. and the stability of the platform for operations is critical in order to be successful in finite location and removal of the things that they wish to bring up for investigation. so we have the equipment. the other factor is of course the cost to do it. it's a very expensive process. >> and these r.o.v.s that they have, i mean, the one that was able to locate the two debris fields, it does have arms that can be moved. is that -- would the arms literally sort of pick up debris pieces or would it bring down cables to try to wrap around them? how would that work? >> it could be used to pick up small pieces, but the major portion of the hull is going to be quite heavy and that r.o.v. will not be able to lift it nor will the umbilical attached to it because it has a strength,
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it's not designed to lift tons of material. but it could take down other lifting utensils that could be attached and remotely inflated or filled with other materials. they used a number of techniques. one was to pump down diesel fuel from the surface to a bladder which causes the item to rise at a very slow and fixed rate. unlike a bag that would be dangerous because it would never make it to surface. the bag would exceed its capacity by the surface -- the outside air. the pressure on it causing the bag to expand beyond its capacity. so there are a number of methods. and our military has methods and has equipment that would make it possible. but again, it's all about the cost to move forward to get that done. >> right. and i mean who -- maybe this is a dumb question, but who would pay for that if somebody -- i mean, i'm not sure who would want to obviously -- perhaps the company would want to, but i
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don't know what their resources are. is there some sort of -- i know an organization like the faa with airplanes that investigates these sorts of things? >> well, what the faa -- and that's a really good example to talk about. when an aircraft goes down, as we know we have the malaysian aircraft which is still missing. very large amount of money spent trying to locate that. there are a number of private companies and agencies that have a vested interest in finding out exactly what happened because a lot of the public fly. so we recover aircraft in the water, i've been involved in many of those, and they just right down to circuits when possible in recovery. on this particular project it's more -- there's only five paem. i people. it's not a mode of transportation that's readily accepted or a large amount of people use. and someone's going to have to probably fund this operation. and once again, it is extremely expensive. >> robert mester, i appreciate your expertise. thank you so much. >> okay.
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>> joining me now to discuss what may have happened to those on board is florida international university professor and retired navy physician dr. aileen marty. dr. marty, appreciate you being with us. sorry again it's under these circumstances. the coast guard officials say the msubmersible suffered a catastrophic implosion. can you tell us what that actually means? obviously in the last couple days when people thought maybe they were running out of oxygen the idea of what that would mean for those on board. but an implosion is very, very quick. >> yeah. that's the one good thing about this horrific tragedy, is that the -- when you get an implosion like that it happens in a fraction of a millisecond. i mean, it's incredibly quick. and it takes more than that, it takes about .25 more than that for the human brain to even realize it's happening. so these people would have -- the entire thing would have collapsed before the individuals inside would even realize that
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the -- that there was a problem. they may have heard a little something ahead of time. they may have gotten a little bit of extra nitrogen in their brain. but they probably didn't know anything, and then they -- the thing exploded. so. >> that's extraordinary. it happens that quickly. i heard you say, and i forgot the figure, about how fast something implodes, the miles per hour that it implodes. >> that's right. about 1500 miles per hour. that's the rate. and that's just -- and when you're talking about -- >> 1500 miles per hour. >> yeah. 1500 -- 1,500 miles per hour. >> at 1500 miles per hour. >> yes. >> that's why you're saying it's so fast that the human brain can't even respond that quickly, so feeling of fear or pain, i mean, it would have been instantaneous. >> would not happen. these people -- they died, and
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that's horrible. but they died in a way that they didn't even realize that they were about to die. and so ultimately among the many ways in which we can pass that's painless. >> there was a question to the navy -- to the coast guard rear admiral today about the recovery of bodies. i don't want to get into too many details. but there would not be bodies. there would not be bones even, is that correct? >> that's correct. >> to recover. >> there would be virtually nothing. these people's bodies were completely collapsed in just little minute fragments. there's very unlikely to find anything there of human tissue. i mean, if you were to search for dna you might possibly find it. but we're talking about an ocean. we're talking about a large
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debris field. you're not going to find much in the way of human remains. >> dr. aileen marty, i appreciate you being with us. it's -- i'm glad to know it was quick. i mean, it's awful no matter what, but i appreciate the detail. thank you. joining me now is someone who knows firsthand what it's like to be inside that submersible. colin taylor was on the titan with his son last summer. colin, appreciate you joining us. you actually were able -- you were on the titan, you went down to the titanic. what was it like being inside? >> it's a truly remarkable experience. i took my son down last summer, july of last year. and it was something we'll neff for never forget. it really was. >> were you frightened? was it claustrophobic? beyond the extraordinary experience of finally looking out the window and seeing the titanic. >> yeah, it is a little frightening to get into that submersible and to know you're going down 2 1/2 miles. i mean, you have the literal and figurative weight of the ocean
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on you. >> do you feel pressure? >> the vessel is maintained at one atmosphere. so there's no real pressure inside. but there is a sense of pressure, i would say, just being that deep in the ocean. >> and is it cold down there? >> it is cold down there. the ambient temperature is close to freezing down there. and the titanium domes on either end, they pick up that cold very quickly. so there's some condensation from the breathing and everything else that goes right -- you know, it's on the domes itself. you feel the cold. >> when you were thinking about doing it, did you know anything about the safety protocols or -- >> i did a lot of diligence up front on the risks. a friend of mine is or was an engineer on a nuclear sub. i spent some time with him asking about it. and he told me that he knew these people, knew the operation, and would put his own family on it. and i spent a lot of time with stockton talking about some of the risks that were involved. so i was aware of some of the things that have come up. >> it's got to be such a bizarre
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feeling for you now. >> oh, my gosh. look, first i'm heartbroken about what's happened here and i feel -- you know, i'm so deeply saddened for the people on board and their families. it is utterly -- >> i keep thinking about the father and son on board. it's so sad. >> it keeps reverberating through my brain. but you know -- yeah, it's -- it's horrible. >> what was communications -- were there coms in terms of like -- you couldn't talk. it was just sending a ping, is that right? to the surface. >> yeah, that's right. so you're bolted in, as i think you know. at surface level there is a beacon on board -- actually, my cell phone seemed to be working at surface. i was picking up gps signals. but as you go down, as soon as you start descending through the water column, there's no gps. and you know, radio communication becomes impossible. so there are a couple of systems. one of them is a sonar-based system. so it's sending off pings.
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the ship is -- the submersible is sending off pings and that's picked up by the mother ship. and then there is a text-based communication. it's very, very low bandwidth and very slow. so you type in a shorthand. but there's constant communication back and forth. and the mother ship is actually trying to guide you and tell you where you are on the way down. it's triangulating your pgs and tryi trying to figure out how close or not you are to the titanic. >> there's no sonar on board. >> there is sonar on board. but the sonar has a range of 150 or 200 meters we went down hit the bottom and our pilot whos wa incredibly skilled had been studying the currents and -- we were very lucky. when we flipped the sonar on there was the bow of the titanic 50 meters away. >> 50 meters away. >> so we inched up to it with the lights of the submersible. there is the bow of the titanic. and it is -- it just blows your
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mind. >> that's incredible. >> it is incredible. >> and how long did you spend on the titanic? >> so at that point our pilot gave the control to p.h. so p.h. nargeolet, who you've been referring to, who is a remarkable man, took the control of it and really toured us around the bow of the titanic. >> and was he talking about what -- >> everything. i mean, we spent all week with him. so we got to know him very well. but he -- you know, for five hours we got all of his knowledge about the titanic. >> yeah. >> and it was incredible. we did try and make a run for the stern, which is about 600 meters away. we couldn't find it. and then we went for the surface. another 2 1/2-hour ride up. >> well, i'm glad you were ok on that. and i appreciate you talking to us tonight. >> my pleasure. >> i'm sorry it's under these circumstances. colin taylor, thank you. >> thank you. >> up next the promises oceangate expeditions made of adventure and safety before its launch. we'll be right back. to debt in e and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. between the high interest, the fees...i felt trapped.
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i called the barnes firm. it was the best call i could've made. your case is often worth more than insuran call the barnes firm to find out i could've made. what your case could be worth. we will help get you the best result possible. ♪ the barnes firm, injury attorneys ♪ call one eight hundred,est resul eight million ♪ whatever led to the catastrophic structural failure and implosion that destroyed the titan submersible and took five lives, this was not just a research vehicle, it was a commercial one clearly with paying passengers and being promoted in part as being safe. our randi kaye tonight -- randi kaye has more. >> and with this i thee christen
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titan. [ cheers and applause ] >> reporter: in april 2018 employees of oceangate including its ceo and co-founder stockton rush christened the brand new titan submersible it had just developed. the project was four years in the making. >> this will be one of the great moments of submersibles in that this technology is what we need to explore the ocean depth. we're going to go to 4,000 meters after our testing in the bahamas, assuming all things pan out as we expect and we validate our engineering. and that will open up 50% of the planet. >> reporter: oceangate used its social media channels and its website to drum up excitement about the titan. its website describes the titan as a state-of-the-art vessel used to explore the wreck of the titanic through its titanic expeditions. in one oceangate youtube video rush teased the submersible as a once-in-a-lifetime experience. >> you'll see things that no one has ever seen before. there is just a ton of things to look at. all kinds of amazing things
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happen. and so it all comes together to make a truly unique experience that you just have to experience to believe. >> this is not a thrill ride for tourists. it's much more. it is an eight-day one-of-a-kind experience. >> reporter: in this youtube video the company promoted its titanic experience. >> oceangate expeditions offers you the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to be a specially trained crew member safely diving to the titanic wreckage site. >> reporter: the promos include rave reviews from those who have been on board the titan. >> there's no other trip like this. fewer people have been to the titanic that have been into space. >> we saw things that maybe human eyes have never seen before. >> reporter: beyond the experience itself the company repeatedly promoted its safety. >> it's very well engineered and very safe. >> reporter: videos also included field tests showing the titan at work. >> out here this is really focused on one thing, and that's the pressure vessel and making sure that that component, which is clearly the most critical
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component of the sub, is safe and capable of handling depths down to 4,000 meters repeatedly with people on board. >> reporter: employees also offered testimonials. >> it's one of the best parts about being in a submersible is we get to bring other people with you. just seeing the excitement they get from going underwater is pretty awesome. >> i found several shipwrecks, about 30 shipwrecks that no one's ever found before, and i would love to visit them in a manned sub. >> reporter: after all the excitement plenty of successful missions and all the hope it would forever change ocean exploration. >> excitement, thrills -- >> king of the world! >> and adventure on the high seas. >> reporter: randi kaye, cnn. >> during james cameron called the carbon design, quote, completely inappropriate for a vessel that sees external pressure. he said, quote, you may have successful dives that fail
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later. the experimental method the makers of the titan used for the vessel that could fit five people. it would still be light weight. there was a concern at the time among some, including a subtractor who worked on the development of titan. he joins me now. d.j., thank you for being with us. i'm sorry for what you must be going through. how does this catastrophic implosion, how does it align with any of the concerns you had? >> well, it seems to be in direct line with the engineering concerns that everybody knew. i mean, it's not a surprising thing. but this is kind of material science in real time. it hadn't been tried before. and pretty much everybody involved understood the risks. >> your concern was -- was it about the carbon fiber being
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used for the hull? what exactly, in your view, made that unsuitable? >> well, carbon fiber, you know, high tensile strength fibers, work really well under tension. and it is just kind of logic that they don't work so well under tensile strength or compression. and initially, i was very excited about the program. and it was my honor, my pleasure to work with stockton rush and the crew. and this -- you know, all of this is really beyond my pay grade. but it made sense to me that that particular engineering choice may lead to some trouble down the road. >> did you or anyone else at the company raise concerns about the integrity of carbon fiber? and i'm wondering, if so, what
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was the reaction? >> well, so, when you're developing something like this, there's a lot of people who have the engineering prowess to speak in to various aspects of a build like this. and material scientists, material experts, subject matter experts, would raise concerns. and then there would be steps by oceangate to mitigate those concerns. and really, whenever you start a project like this and you make some initial choices, just one thing builds on another. so, there was a definite reason to pick carbon fiber. but, yeah, it may not be the right material. >> yeah. i appreciate your time tonight. thank you very much. i'm joined now by someone who's been with us this week and knew
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hamish harding and stockton rush well, who was involved with two missions involved with reaching the titanic. i'm sorry for your loss. can you just talk about how you're feeling, what went through your mind when the u.s. coast guard finally announced the catastrophic implosion? >> yeah, it was obviously devastating and unhearting when we finally heard the verdict, if you like. was trying to be very optimistic and trying to stay positive and hoping for a little miracle for the submersible to come up to the surface. it became increasingly clear that time was up, and obviously with the u.s. coast guard giving the final verdict, that was it. heartbreaking, devastating. the world has lost five great men, i'm afraid. >> the fact that this vehicle had gone down to the titanic on a number of occasions, had
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brought people down without failing in the past, i'm wondering how do you account for that? why a failure now? >> i'm not an engineer, but there have been discussions in the science community that the material -- there could be some questions around it. and it clearly was working a number of times. but during the 2021 season and 2022 seasons, there were a number of dives that took place, but not all of them were successful. some of them got aborted and perhaps for cautiousness or safety reasons, et cetera. but the big question was always going to be around, does this composite material, can it withstand these enormous pressures? it is a new way of building submersibles compared to the old, solid, titanium nickel and steel like the mere 1 and mere 2 that the russians have been
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using. and there was also the ones i signed up for in 2012 before i ended up signing up with oceangate in 2019. so, it is -- it was a new technology, obviously not certified. but, yeah, sadly proved not to be solid. >> the coast guard suggested today that the implosion likely occurred when the submersible first went missing about an hour and 45 minutes or so into the voyage. as you mentioned, a u.s. navy official told us that they discovered an acoustic anomaly, quote, consistent with an implosion or explosion in the vicinity with where the titan was operating when the communications were lost, end quote. they also said those could be sounds given off by other ships, those noises we had been told about over the last several days, the banging sound that had been reported. do you think those were now unrelated.
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i mean, if the implosion occurred right away, then clearly the sounds were unrelated. >> yeah. abs absolutely. i mean, the u.s. coast guards would know better than i do because they've got this sonar down there in the water. and if they had heard that kind of big sound from the implosion on the sunday, on the very day it went down, obviously nobody -- they had disseminated that, so nobody knew about it. but if that is now, in retrospect, the case, yeah, that would seem quite likely. if you think about it, if the material was going to give in on the way down and it couldn't withstand the pressures -- obviously as you went down to one hour and 45 minutes, would probably have been around 2,500 meters or so, well then that's got to be the point where it gave up. but, yeah, the u.s. coast guard has these informations. we haven't had them until now. and i think the investigation will really show eventually what
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really happened. >> obviously this is personal for you. you lost two friends in this tragedy. what do you want people to know about them? >> hamish was a person who was larger than life and absolutely super-amazing person, top guy, great businessman, very successful in the aviation space. and also a very, very accomplished adventurer. three guinness world records to his name. he travelled to the south pole with buzz aldrin and a friend of mine here from england. he had really done nsome amazin things in the adventure space, and he was always looking for the next adventure. he was a guy who enjoyed life and enjoyed pushing the limits. it's a really great loss to the world. and in terms of stockton, obviously he was trying his very best to build these new things. he was a keen explorer as well.
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and it's just sad to see all five of them, quite frankly, disappear just like this. and my hearts go out to their families. >> do you think this is going to impact deep water exploration in the future? >> i think -- you remember when the titanic sank, obviously this was a massive -- that was a world event that the world's media was on this thing. and the sinking of the titanic led to new regulations related to how many rescue boats you had on it. on titanic, there were not enough rescue boats for everybody. that got changed through global legislation. safety measures got put in place, et cetera. so, that titanic event more than 100 years ago changed regulation. it is quite possible that with the titan imploding like this and with the partial lack of or
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maybe a gap in the regulatory space if you do dives in international borders, it's quite possible that the titan might actually be the catalyst for more regulation within the submersibles field or sub-z field, just like we have it in space. as you know, i'm going to space next year. but in order to have a rocket, you need to have it certified and testing and testing and testing. you can't just fly up with it like that. so, maybe this subsea space is moving to a more regulated space like the space arenas. >> i appreciate it. thank you so much. that's it for us. "cnn prime time" with kaitlan collins starts now. hey, anderson. you arrived there on the scene just as we learned that there were no survivors here, that all five on board had died. there have obviously been this huge international search underway. what have you heard from people on
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