Foreign News

Missing Titanic Sub:Tapping Sounds Picked from Submersible

Written by Nachaida Yuguda

News that sounds were recorded by sonar buoys in a massive rescue operation, which is racing against time to find the Titan in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean.

The Submersible was lost on a deep-sea voyage to the Titanic wreck three days ago,with five tourist men on board.

Underwater operations have been relocated to investigate the noises, the US Coast Guard has said, but so far they haven’t found anything.

And with oxygen supplies expected to run out at around 11:00 GMT on Thursday, the next few hours are critical.

US authorities say the noises were heard at half hour intervals for about four hours on Tuesday, according to reports by several outlets.

According to BBC ,the deep sea expert said it is hard to determine what these noises might be without seeing the data – and the commander leading the search also confirmed the source of them is unknown.

But it is possible they could be short, sharp, relatively high frequency noises – made from within the vessel by hitting a hard object against the end of the sub.

Frank Owen, from the Submarine Institute of Australia, says he is confident – based on the information available – the sounds are coming from inside the vessel.

“If there was a 30-minute interval, it’s very unlikely to be anything but human related,”

The men on board include British businessman Hamish Harding, 58, British-Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood, 48, his son Suleman, 19, and Stockton Rush, 61, the chief executive of OceanGate, which runs the voyages at a cost of $250,000 (£195,270) per head.

But Mr Owen says the noises “smack of advice” coming from the fifth man on board – 77-year-old Paul-Henry Nargeolet, a former French navy diver and renowned explorer.

“He would know the protocol for trying to alert searching forces… on the hour and the half hour you bang like hell for three minutes,” Mr Owen said.

But in previous maritime searches – like those for missing Malaysian Airlines flight MH370 in 2014, and the Russian submarine Kursk in 2000 – underwater noises were heard too, and yielded no results.

The other ray of hope is that these sounds were picked up by the sonar buoys at all, Mr Owen says.

The Titanic lays 12,500ft (3,800m) beneath the ocean surface, where the sonar buoys sit.

“The sonar buoys receiver is able to plot that sort of information really very quickly… it would take a very short time to find.”

However, the underwater vehicles which have been sent to find the origin of the noise “have yielded negative results”, according to the US Coast Guard’.

BBC