After several days of agony, last Thursday the implosion of the Titanan experimental submersible that descended to the bottom of the Atlantic to visit the remains of the Titanic, and the consequent death of its five occupants.
It was a friend of some of the crew members who confirmed to the British media that on Thursday they had been found at the bottom of the sea, a short distance from the wreckage. Titanic, some parts of the submersible, which set off all the alarms.
Within minutes, the company that owns and operates the TitanOceanGate, confirmed the discovery of said remains and the death of its five occupants, and a short time later the US Coast Guard explained that the submersible had suffered a “catastrophic implosion”.

The remains of the ‘Titan’ are unloaded from the ship ‘Horizon Arctic’ at the Canadian Coast Guard dock in St. John’s, Newfoundland

The remains of the ‘Titan’ are unloaded from the ship ‘Horizon Arctic’ at the Canadian Coast Guard dock in St. John’s, Newfoundland

Image of the ship ‘Horizon Arctic’ as parts recovered from OceanGate’s ‘Titan’ submersible are returned, in the port of Saint John, Newfoundland

Image of the ship ‘Horizon Arctic’ as parts recovered from OceanGate’s ‘Titan’ submersible are returned, in the port of Saint John, Newfoundland

Image of the ship ‘Horizon Arctic’ as parts recovered from OceanGate’s ‘Titan’ submersible are returned, in the port of Saint John, Newfoundland

Image of the ship ‘Horizon Arctic’ as parts recovered from OceanGate’s ‘Titan’ submersible are returned, in the port of Saint John, Newfoundland

Image of the ship ‘Horizon Arctic’, which has transported the parts recovered from OceanGate’s ‘Titan’ submersible, in the port of Saint John, Newfoundland

The Coast Guard ship ‘Sycamore’ as parts recovered from OceanGate’s ‘Titan’ submersible are returned via the ‘Horizon Arctic’