How? I thought they turned into like a mist or whatever?
Maybe one of the families will have something tangible for a funeral/memorial service. Some folks need that sort of thing to make it easier to grieve and eventually move on.
It was super interesting to see the parts they recovered in the video.
Where is this video?
There is a break in the story where they have three links, and the last one says something about the video of the wreckage.
It was at the bottom of the article when I saw it
Presume that similar to air incident investigations, there’ll be a forensics investigation on the wreckage to formally determine the cause of the incident.
However, the difference between the two situations is that aircraft have fully documented designs and maintenance reports, whereas this craft appears to have been cobbled together with zip ties.
That’s crazy. I imagine that at such depths, organic remains take longer to decompose than usual.
From what I’ve learned from the titanic I’m pretty sure they decompose faster as I know that even the clothes and bones of the titanic victims have decomposed we were only able to count victims based on the souls of their shoes that being the only part of the bodys that didn’t decompose
To be fair, it went down in 1912 and the wreck wasn’t discovered until the 1980s, so plenty of time to be decomposed/eaten. I have also read that bodies tend to leave behind feet in water (sometimes even wash up to shore) because the shoes prevent creatures from scavenging the feet.
“US medical professionals will conduct a formal analysis of presumed remains”
So… bits and pieces of organic matter that may or may not be human. I assumed that they all were blown to smithereens in the accident, so I’m curious to know what they found.
This incident was the other way around, but it gives a good indication of the forces at play: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byford_Dolphin