A video of OceanGate’s Titan submersible wreckage has now surfaced online. Near the location where the British passenger liner sank in 1912, the submersible that was on its way to an expedition to the Titanic shipwreck site, which is almost 13,000 feet below the surface of the ocean, collapsed. The five-day international hunt has come to an end after it was determined that all five crew members on the unfortunate ship were killed in the ‘catastrophic implosion’.

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After two hours into what was supposed to be a two-hour dive to the most renowned shipwreck in the world, the submersible, owned by the US company OceanGate, lost touch with the support ship above the water.

The US Coast Guard discovered five significant pieces of the 22-foot vessel among the debris, including the tail cone and two parts of the pressure hull.

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As condolences poured in for the five passengers aboard who perished, authorities switched their attention to figuring out why a submarine transporting tourists to the Titanic site imploded deep in the North Atlantic, according to the Associated Press.

After a terrible five-day tale that included a desperate 24-hour search for the Titan, it was revealed on Thursday that no one had survived.

According to Rear Adm. John Mauger of the First Coast Guard District, the investigation into what transpired was already underway and will continue in the vicinity of the Titanic where the submersible’s debris was discovered.

The five presumed dead, according to industry experts, are the first known fatalities in more than 60 years of civilian deep-sea submersion.

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However, even as they prepared for closer scrutiny, business officials acknowledged that it was challenging to predict what kind of changes may occur.

There are no laws and no authority in charge of overseeing international waters on the high seas where the Titan and other submersibles operate.