Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pricey Tours Of Decaying Titanic Shipwreck Delayed Until June 2020

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jun, 2019 09:18 PM

    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. — Adventure tourists who paid $168,000 each to help survey the Titanic shipwreck off Newfoundland have been told their much-anticipated dives are being postponed.

     

    The U.S. company behind a series of week-long expeditions has announced that the submarine research tours will be postponed until June 2020, after the operator of a staging vessel backed out.


    The news comes just two weeks before the inaugural voyage was set to depart from St. John's, N.L., and a year after damage to the submarine delayed the original 2018 departure date.


    OceanGate Expeditions said the delay is disappointing but changing vessels so close to the departure date would risk safety and the mission's success.


    The dives will be the first manned surveys of the decaying vessel since 2005, in a series of expeditions that will see ticket-holders assist with data gathering, photography, sonar operation and other note-taking duties.


    Explorers will be seeking to determine how fast bacteria are devouring remains of the so-called unsinkable ship that struck an iceberg and went down off the southeast coast of Newfoundland in 1912.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fierce Blaze Guts North Vancouver Home, Leaves Resident With Serious Burns

    Fierce Blaze Guts North Vancouver Home, Leaves Resident With Serious Burns
    VANCOUVER — A woman has been badly burned and a large North Vancouver home has been gutted in a pre-dawn fire.

    Fierce Blaze Guts North Vancouver Home, Leaves Resident With Serious Burns

    B.C. RCMP Rolls Out Online Reporting Tool Starting In Surrey On Monday

    Surrey RCMP is set to become the first detachment to test a new online crime reporting tool on Monday, followed by proposed tests in three other B.C. communities later this summer.  

    B.C. RCMP Rolls Out Online Reporting Tool Starting In Surrey On Monday

    Man Who Threatened Montreal Jewish Girls School Found Not Criminally Responsible

    Man Who Threatened Montreal Jewish Girls School Found Not Criminally Responsible
    A Montreal man who was facing charges of inciting hatred online against Jews has been found not criminally responsible due to mental illness but will have to abide by a lengthy list of conditions that include staying off social media.

    Man Who Threatened Montreal Jewish Girls School Found Not Criminally Responsible

    Shutdown, Cuts At B.C. Pulp And Sawmills Add To Forestry Job Losses

    Canfor Pulp says the Taylor mill won't operate from June 29 to Aug. 5, reducing pulp production by about 25,000 tonnes.

    Shutdown, Cuts At B.C. Pulp And Sawmills Add To Forestry Job Losses

    Edibles, Other Pot Products, Will Hit Shelves After Mid-December: Ottawa

    A "limited selection" of next-generation cannabis products such as edibles will "gradually" hit retail shelves no earlier than mid-December 2019, Health Canada says.

    Edibles, Other Pot Products, Will Hit Shelves After Mid-December: Ottawa

    More Bears Entering Human Environments This Spring: Conservation Officers

    More Bears Entering Human Environments This Spring: Conservation Officers
    VANCOUVER — The BC Conservation Officer Service is reminding residents to brush up on bear safety after had a spike in conflict calls this spring.    

    More Bears Entering Human Environments This Spring: Conservation Officers