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‘Presumed Human Remains’ Found In Imploded Submersible Debris, Coast Guard Says

The U.S. Coast Guard on Wednesday recovered “presumed human remains” from the wreckage of the Titan submarine that exploded.

The Coast Guard found evidence on the seabed where a submarine blew up and killed five people. according to Go to agency press release. M/V HORIZON ARCTIC, which found the evidence, arrived in St. John’s, Newfoundland, on Wednesday.

The Marine Investigative Board (MBI) plans to transport the suspect’s remains to a U.S. port in a U.S. Coast Guard cutter for further examination, the U.S. Coast Guard said.

“We are grateful for the coordinated support of international and intergovernmental agencies to recover and preserve this important evidence at extreme distances and depths offshore,” said MBI Chair Captain Jason Neubauer in a statement. Stated. “This evidence will provide investigators in several international jurisdictions with important insight into the causes of this tragedy. We still have a lot of work to do to make sure it doesn’t happen.”

The submarine left St. John’s on June 18 to head to the long-sunk Titanic, but within two hours contact with the mothership was lost. Before the implosion was confirmed, experts had predicted that the submarine would run out of oxygen by Thursday because it had 96 hours of breathable air. (Related article: “I Can’t Handle It”: Director James Cameron Explains Sub-Design Problems, Reflects on Expedition to See the Debris)

The victims are British billionaire Hamish Harding, French oceanographer and Titanic researcher Paul Henri Narjolet, Oceangate CEO and pilot Stockton Rush, and Pakistani businessman Shazada Dawood. identified as Mr. and his 19-year-old son, Mr. Sleman.

After an intensive search for the submarine, the U.S. Coast Guard found wreckage on June 22, announcing that the submarine had suffered a “catastrophic implosion.”

Expert G. Michael Harris told Fox News that the casualties would have been implosion, considering it takes 2 nanoseconds for the ship to explode and 4 nanoseconds for it to be recorded in the human brain. said he was not affected by

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