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    What's this?
Titanic iceberg photo heads to auction
Taken only 2 days before the Titanic sank, the photo shows a massive iceberg that matches descriptions of the one that doomed the legendary liner.
Thu, Nov 29 2012 at 2:12 PM

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Art & Architecture
Titanic Iceberg

Photo: RR Auctions

Could the above photo contain one of modern history's most famous natural villains? 
 
On the evening of April 14, 1912, on a rare calm, clear and moonless night in the North Atlantic, the Titanic’s starboard side glanced off an iceberg at 11:40 p.m. The massive ship had been speeding (around 22 knots or 25 mph) dangerously close to an ice field and may have course-corrected away from it and accidentally maneuvered directly into the path of the deadly berg.
 
The vessel, the largest in the world at the time, sank two and half hours later, taking the lives of 1,502 people. When rescue ships arrived later that morning, they were stunned to find themselves surrounded by ice. According to the captain of the Carpathia, the ship that was first on the scene, more than 20 large bergs (some estimated at over 100 feet tall) were observed.
 
In the century since the sinking, photos have surfaced of some of the suspected icebergs that Titanic may have collided with. What makes the above photo different is that it was captured two days before the sinking — and actually matches up with another iceberg found in the disaster area.
 
The rare original 9.75 x 8 photo of the "blueberg," photographed by Captain W. F. Wood of the S. S. Etonian on April 12, 1912, is being placed on the auction block by RR Auctions. The company expects the shot to go for between $8,000-$10,000.  
 
According to the listing, there's reason to believe this iceberg might be the culprit based on drawings by surviving members of Titanic's crew — as well as a photo (shown below) taken from the German ship Prinz Adalbert on the morning of the sinking from another angle. Seamen Joseph Scarrott, who spied the berg once the ship had passed it, said it resembled in shape “the Rock of Gibraltar” with its highest point to the right.
 
iceberg
 
"The fact that the particular iceberg in the Etonian image offered here is known to have been photographed at a position arguably two to three days’ iceberg travel time to Titanic’s foundering position, and that it substantially matches both the sketches drawn by Titanic’s crewmen and the photo taken after the ship went down, allows noted Titanic experts to establish this photograph as capturing the iceberg everyone has been talking about for the past century," the listing says.
 
Still interested? The auction will kick off on Dec. 13 and end on Dec. 16. Jump here for more details.
 
Related post on MNN: James Cameron creates new Titanic sinking simulation
 

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anonymous
Jimbo Dec 01 2012 at 9:38 AM

hmmmmmm whatever happened to the pic of a different iceberg taken the morning after the sinking... the one with the streak of red paint at the waterline that exactly matched the colour of the titanics hull?? the one the " experts" all said was THE iceberg, and is clearly not any of the two pictured?

10 grand seems a pretty steep price to pay for a picture of any old random floating chunk of ice.

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