The Titanic's Killer Was the Size of a Sheet of Paper

The Titanic's Killer Was the Size of a Sheet of Paper

The damage that sank the Titanic was a chain of punctures, each about the size of a sheet of paper — spread across six compartments. For over a century, no one could photograph that wound. Then two robots captured 715,000 images of everything else, and a supercomputer finished the story. Every claim in this video traces to physical evidence — receipts, not myths. CHAPTERS 0:00 The Paper-Sized Killer 0:30 Photographing a Ghost — 715,000 Images 1:40 The Valve That Stayed Open for 110 Years 3:20 The Officer the Movies Got Wrong 5:00 Sinking the Titanic Again — Inside a Supercomputer 7:00 How She Actually Broke Apart 8:40 The Race Against Rust WHAT THE DIGITAL TWIN REVEALED • A steam valve frozen open — evidence of the engineers' last stand • The davit that supports First Officer Murdoch's innocence • Concave boilers, a shattered porthole, and a hull torn — not snapped • A 2025 simulation that confirmed a calculation made in 1912 SOURCES Magellan / Atlantic Productions 2022 full digital scan (715,000 images, 16 TB) · National Geographic "Titanic: The Digital Resurrection" (2025) · University College London collision simulation (Prof. Jeom-Kee Paik) · British Wreck Commissioner's Inquiry 1912, testimony of Edward Wilding · survivor testimony incl. Second Officer Charles Lightoller NEXT: a 2,000-year-old library burned black by Vesuvius — and the AI that just started reading it again. Subscribe so you don't miss it. #Titanic #History #Documentary