Highlights from Day One as the search for the missing Titanic submersible continues
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There is less than 40 hours of oxygen supply left on the missing vessel, named Titan, which is carrying five people, a U.S. Coast Guard official said Tuesday as the search continues.
The submersible is part of an OceanGate Expeditions tour that offers passengers a once-in-a-lifetime experience to explore the Titanic wreckage. It went missing Sunday after it lost contact with the research vessel Polar Prince.
There's five people on board with less than 40 hours of oxygen left. They lost contact with them on Sunday and can't find them.
What to know about the missing vessel, Titan
- The U.S. Coast Guard is searching for the missing research submersible, named Titan, that disappeared Sunday.
- The wreckage of the Titanic, the iconic ocean liner that sank more than a century ago, is 900 nautical miles east of Cape Cod, Massachusetts.
- The sub had up to 96 hours of oxygen supply and by 1 p.m. ET Tuesday was down to 41 hours, the U.S. Coast Guard said.
- The price of a spot on the submersible was $250,000. It was on only its third trip since OceanGate Expeditions began offering trips in 2021.
British billionaire Hamish Harding, owner of Action Aviation, was also among the five people on the vessel, along with French dive expert Paul Henry Nargeolet and prominent Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his son, Suleman.
The U.S. Coast Guard on Tuesday released an image showing the search patterns for the missing submersible Titan.
The U.S. Coast Guard said Tuesday night that it and other agencies and searchers are operating under a unified command as the search for the missing submersible Titan continues.
More than 10,000 square miles had been searched by Tuesday morning, the Coast Guard said, and weather and visibility have improved.
Three Canadian coast guard ships, as well as a commercial vessel and a French research vessel with remote-operated vehicles, and a Canadian navy ship with a mobile decompression chamber were on the way, the U.S. Coast Guard said.
The Bahamian research vessel Deep Energy and a U.S. Air National Guard C-130 are also searching, the U.S. Coast Guard said.
They suggested the possibility it might have gotten tangled in the wreckage of the Titanic, in which case it would be easier to find.