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For the first time, we can fully picture what the world s most famousshipwrecklooks like at the bottom of the Atlantic.Using deep-sea mapping, researchers were able to create the first full-sized, 3D digital scan of the R.M.S. Titanic, resting 12,500 feet down in the ocean.The digital twin shows the ship s exact current condition with details never seen before, including the ship s bow and stern, which separated from the ship upon sinking.The expedition was carried out over a six-
stanley cup week period in the summer of 2022 byMage
stanley website llan Ltd., a deep water mapping company, andAtlantic
stanley cup Productions, which is also working on a documentary about the project.The goal was to shed new light on exactly how the wreck happened and how the ship broke apart when sinking.The British passenger liner was on its maiden voyage when it struck an iceberg on April 14, 1912, and went down, killing more than 1,500 people.Although there have been images of the wreck since it was discovered in 1985 鈥?including some footage used in the 1997 blockbuster film Titanic 鈥?cameras had only been able to produce snapshots of the wreckage, due to murky water and low light.The new scan captured the ship s entirety using technology Magellan developed for more than five years.Researchers remotely controlled two submersibles nicknamed Romeo and Juliet from a ship. Those two analyzed the entire three-mile-wide debris field, including the bow and stern which are more than 2,600 feet apart.Over the course of more than 200 hours Sfos Cardinals fire assistant Sean Kugler after incident in Mexico
LINCOLN, Neb. 鈥?Nebraska athletic director Trev Alberts announced on Monday that the university would not provide balloons to release at Husker football games this fall because of a helium shortage. While we re still concerned about the environmental impact of the balloons, the reality is
stanley becher acquiring helium in today s day and age has given some of the challenges, and some of the production of it is really challenged, and it s been hard to get, Alberts said on his monthly radio show. And so we ve been asked by the university that the helium we are getting as a university we need to use for medical purposes at UNMC in Omaha. And so, we are this year not going to be providing the red balloons for the first time at Memorial Stadium.
stanley us For decades, the Huskers have had the tradition of releasing red balloons into the sky when Nebraska scores its first points of every home football game. We re going to work with Brandon Meier and our marketing departme
stanley cup nt to try to develop something, whether it s digitally or something, to sort of designate and keep it alive, said Alberts. We re working hard on some alternatives in the future, but I just want to be upfront with our fans. NU s home opener is Sept. 3 against North Dakota. As we looked into it as an athletic department, it became pretty clear that there s a very limited supply of helium and was going to be hard to get, Alberts said. So we decided to end that tradition this year. Adam Krueger at KMTV first reported this story.