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The missing Titanic-bound tourist submarine carrying five people could be stuck in the 111-year-old shipwreck lying 12,500 feet at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, the US Coast Guard said.

Rear Admiral John Mauger, who is overseeing the search and rescue mission for the missing submarine, said it was possible the vessel could be trapped in the Titanic, which lies about 370 miles off the coast of Newfoundland, Canada.

“We don’t have equipment onsite that can do a survey of the bottom,” Mauger told The Mirror. “There is a lot of debris so locating it will be difficult. Right now, we’re focused on trying to locate it.”

Mauger told reporters on Monday that the Canadian Coast Guard has deployed multiple sonar buoys capable of detecting the submarine even at the bottom of the Atlantic.

He said the location of the sub’s disappearance has proven a difficult search area, but that US and Canadian ships and planes, along with commercial vessels, have been combing the seas since it disappeared Sunday morning.

The Titan sub. Becky Kagan Schott / OceanGate Expeditions

“We began immediately to mobilize assets to search both the surface of the water, search from the air, and to detect any vessels under the water as well,” Mauger said. “We’ve had a comprehensive search to find these people.”

The search comes as OceanGate Expeditions, the operators of the missing Titan sub, informed the Coast Guard that their vessel only has about four days of life support installed.

“In terms of the hours, we understood that was 96 hours of emergency capability from the operator, and so we anticipate that there’s somewhere between 70 to the full 96 hours available at this point,” Mauger said Monday.

British billionaire Hamish Harding was confirmed to be among the missing as he was documenting his days leading up the Sunday expedition on social media. Facebook/Hamish Harding
Shahzada Dawood, one of Pakistan’s wealthiest men, was aboard the missing sub. via REUTERS
As was OceanGate Expeditions’ founder and CEO Stockton Rush. OceanGate
Sulaiman Dawood, 19, was on the submarine with his father. Here he is pictured with his mother, Christine. Facebook/Christine Dawood

OceanGate Expeditions, a private company that provides tours for the Titanic wreckage site for as much as $250,000, confirmed that their submarine had gone missing with five crew members aboard.  

The crew members have been identified as British billionaire and aviator Hamish Harding, Pakistani energy and tech mogul Shanzada Dawood and his son Sulaiman, famed French diver Paul-Henri Nargeolet, and OceanGate founder and CEO Stockton Rush.

The US Coast Guard said that the research vessel Polar Prince had lost contact with Titan after about one hour and 45 minutes after it embarked below the seas in search of the Titanic.

Leading Titanic explorer Paul-Henri Nargeolet is pictured in 2013 examining a model of the famous sunken ship. AFP via Getty Images

OceanGate noted that because of its location in the middle of the Atlantic, they rely on Elon Musk’s Starlink satellites for its communications at sea. 

Tourist submersible exploring Titanic wreckage disappears in Atlantic Ocean

What we know

A submersible on a pricey tourist expedition to the Titanic shipwreck in the Atlantic Ocean has vanished with likely only four days’ worth of oxygen. The US Coast Guard said the small submarine began its journey underwater with five passengers Sunday morning, and the Canadian research vessel that it was working with lost contact with the crew about an hour and 45 minutes into the dive.

It was later found that a top-secret team with the US Navy detected the implosion of the Titan submersible on Sunday, but did not stop search efforts due because the evidence was “not definitive” and a decision was made to “make every effort to save the lives on board.” 

Who was on board?

The family of world explorer Hamish Harding confirmed on Facebook that he was among the five traveling in the missing submarine. Harding, a British businessman who previously paid for a space ride aboard the Blue Origin rocket last year, shared a photo of himself on Sunday signing a banner for OceanGate’s latest voyage to the shipwreck. 

Also onboard were Pakistani energy and tech mogul Shanzada Dawood and his son Sulaiman, 19; famed French diver and Titanic expert Paul-Henri Nargeolet, and OceanGate founder and CEO Stockton Rush.

What’s next?

“We’re doing everything we can do to locate the submersible and rescue those on board,” Rear Adm. John Mauger told reporters. “In terms of the hours, we understood that was 96 hours of emergency capability from the operator.

Coast Guard officials said they are currently focusing all their efforts on locating the sub first before deploying any vessel capable of reaching as far below as 12,500 feet where the Titanic wreck is located.

Mauger, first district commander and leader of the search-and-rescue mission, said the US was coordinating with Canada on the operation.

The debris recovered from the US Coast Guard’s Titan submersible search site early Thursday included “a landing frame and a rear cover from the submersible.”

After search efforts to recover the stranded passengers proved futile, and bits of debris from the submersible were found, it was decided that the sub imploded, which correlated with an anomaly picked up by the US Navy in the same area.

The Coast Guard later reported that all 5 passengers were confirmed dead, and rescue efforts were halted.

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Because it lacks the ability to use GPS underwater when diving, Titan relies on its partner surface ship to guide it to the Titanic via messages.

The ongoing search for the sub is focused on an area about 900 miles off the coast of Cape Cod at a depth of nearly 13,000 feet — making it the deepest-ever rescue mission in history if successful.

Experts, however, have cautioned that few craft can reach that depth and even if they could, it’s unlikely they could attach to the submersible and tow it up to the ocean’s surface.

OceanGate Expeditions’ Titan sub is among the few that conducts tourist trips to the Titanic. Becky Kagan Schott / OceanGate Expeditions

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