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The bronze statue "Diana of Versailles" from the Titanic was photographed this summer by a company with salvage rights to the wreck site on its first expedition there in many years.
Divers rediscovered Titanic's lost bronze "Diana of Versailles" statue, highlighting ongoing ship decay and marking a key find since its last sighting in 1986.
In 1986, an explorer captured an image of “Diana of Versailles,” a 2-foot-tall bronze statue of the Roman goddess, lying in the debris of the RMS Titanic, more than 12,000 feet deep in the ...
Long-Lost Diana Statue That Sank With the Titanic Comes to Light on the Ocean Floor She had been unseen since she was photographed in 1986. Postcard depicting the Titanic, 1907.
The statue of the goddess Diana is based on a replica housed at the Louvre and was only noticed in the final few hours of the expedition as it barely stuck out of sand, surrounded by weathered debris.
A bronze statue from the Titanic — not seen in decades and feared to be lost for good — is among the discoveries made by the company with salvage rights to the wreck site on its first ...
A highlight was the rediscovery of the statue “Diana of Versailles,” last seen in 1986, and the statue now has a clear and updated image, the company said. On a sadder note, a significant section of ...
The statue was first found 70 years after the Titanic's sinking, but became lost until it was recently spotted. "A highlight is the re-discovery of the bronze statue 'Diana of Versailles,' last ...
The bronze statue "Diana of Versailles" from the Titanic was photographed this summer by RMS Titanic Inc., the company with salvage rights to the wreck site RMS Titanic Inc.
This image released on Monday, Sept. 2, 2024, shows the bronze statue “Diana of Versaille” from the Titanic photographed this summer by a company with salvage rights to the wreck site on its ...