According to the reports, the glacier's height was about 140 feet and length 200 feet and its depth, underwater, estimated at 980 feet. The real origin of the red color cannot be said. According to the Minia’s records, it was the only iceberg in the area. Those on the ship thought the berg was strange because of a reported red smear near its base — the same color of the Titanic's keel. One thing is for certain: there was lots of ice and icebergs the night Titanic sank. This ship sailed past the scene of the accident on its way from Bremerhaven to New York. The massive ship had been speeding (around 22 knots or 25 mph) dangerously close to an ice field and may have course-corrected away from it and maneuvered accidentally directly into the path of the deadly berg. Both have singled out the iceberg to the left of the Titanic as the one that likely to have done the damage. Michael d’Estries has been writing about science, culture, space and sustainability since 2005. Maybe it was from a ship, maybe it was a colored layer.

(Photo: The chief steward of the liner Prinz Adalbert [public domain]/Wikimedia Commons)By some accounts, there were many icebergs in the fast icefield that could have struck the fatal blow to the Titanic's hull. Some vessels were there to retrieve bodies, while others were simply following shipping lanes that took them through the area. Some have chalked the strange color up to bacteria that often form layers on bergs. Among the colorful characters and heart-wrenching stories that make up the tragic tale of the

The Titanic stood no chance as it made its way from England to the United States – as the 75 million tonne iceberg had been building from snow which fell around 100,000 years previously. According to sources, this iceberg was photographed from the ship Prinz Adalbert on the morning of April 15, the same day the Titanic sank. This iceberg has in fact some remarkable similarities to the iceberg as described by survivors of the disaster.The icebergs from the North Atlantic originate mainly from the western coasts of Greenland, where ice streams deliver large quantities of ice in the fjord-systems which leads to the Baffin sea. It took 88 years after the sinking of the Titanic for this photograph, taken by Stephan Rehorek on board the German steamer Bremen, to be made public. This photo was taken by Captain De Carteret of the Minia. This ship sailed past the scene of the accident on its way from Bremerhaven to New York. The photo was taken by Stephan Rehorek, a Bohemian traveling the German steamer Bremen.Photography of an iceberg from the cable ship “Minia”.Another iceberg was photographed by he cable ship “Minia”, one of the first ships to reach the area in search for debris and bodies. (Photo: Unknown author [public domain]/Wikimedia Commons)This map shows the location of various ships and icebergs at the Titanic wreck site.
Iceberg Collision Scene from the Titanic movie SUBSCRIBE, LIKE, COMMENT AND SHARE!! (Right) Colorized version of the picture taken from “Prinz Adalbert”, (Left) Photography taken from the ship “Birma.This can hardly have been the iceberg which the Titanic collided with: it is known that the Titanic ripped great chunks out of the iceberg and did not simply leave a few scars of red paint. What caught his attention was the smear of red paint along the base of the berg, indication that it had collided with a ship. An iceberg was sighted “in the vicinity” which fitted precisely the description of the Titanic iceberg. On 20th April the Bremen sailed into the area of the disaster, the people on board could see wreckage and the bodies of more than a hundred victims floating on the water. Another iceberg photographed April 20, from the German steamer “Bremen” claimed to be the Titanic iceberg based on the vicinity to the location of the disaster and the description of the iceberg according to eyewitnesses reports of Titanic survivors. The Titanic struck an iceberg at 10.20pm on 14 April and sank several hours later, claiming some 1,522 lives. Icebergs with layers in different colors (mostly brownish) are not scarce.

Many believe it to be the The crew found this iceberg floating in the vicinity of wreckage and bodies.

Based on testimony from surviving crew members, the iceberg that doomed Titanic was a "dark-blue mass" between 30-60 feet high above the water line. The Minia was one of the first ships on the scene following the disaster. (You can see it at the top of this file.) William de Carteret of the Minia reportedly said that this was the only iceberg near the scene of the collision. Just before midnight on April 14, 1912, the ocean liner Titanic struck an iceberg. One thing is for certain: there was lots of ice and icebergs the night Titanic sank.
The Titanic Iceberg: A Photo History of Potential Suspects

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