1억원 넘는 타이타닉 해저 관광 상품 Now you can take a two-mile-deep tour of the Titanic - so long as you can afford $100,000 a ticket : VIDEO
Now you can take a tour of the Titanic - but the two-mile submarine dive to the wreckage will cost an eyewatering £86,500 a ticket
RMS Titanic wreckage will see tourists go two miles under sea in submarine
London-based tour operator will run eight-day trips to Titanic's resting place
Intrepid sightseers will fly by helicopter from Newfoundland to support yacht
After spending two days aboard the yacht, they will endure a five-hour dive
이제 잠수정을 타고 1912년에 대서양에서 침몰한 타이타닉호를 볼 수 있다.
런던의 여행사는 타이타닉호의 잔해를 보여주기 위해 8일간 3.2km 해저 여행을
하는 상품을 선보였다.
두려움이 없는 관광객들은 뉴파운드랜드에서 요트장까지 헬리콥터로 날아가서
요트에서 이틀을 보낸 뒤 5시간 잠수해야 한다.
비용은 10만불.
우리나라 돈으로 약 1억원이 넘는다.
황기철 콘페이퍼 에디터
Ki Chul Hwang, conpaper editor
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By ELEANOR HAYWARD FOR THE DAILY MAIL and MARK DUELL FOR MAILONLINE
17 March 2017
It is the shipwreck that continues to have untold fascination more than a century on.
And now the wreckage of the RMS Titanic will be opened up to tourists – at £86,500 per ticket for those willing to embark on the white-knuckle trip two miles under the sea in a mini-submarine.
From May next year a London-based tour operator, Blue Marble Private, will run eight-day trips to the Titanic's final resting place.
The wreckage of the RMS Titanic on the bed of the Atlantic Ocean will be opened up to tourists
OceanGate, based in Everett, Washington, owns and operates two five-person submersibles but is building a
new craft called Cyclops 2 (concept picture) to visit Titanic
The wreckage was not discovered until 1985, and the bow and the stern of the boat, which split in two as it
was sinking, lie nearly 2,000ft apart on the ocean floor
The trips will be run by OceanGate Expeditions on its new Cyclops 2 submersible (above)
Only 140 people have completed the dive to see the Titanic's decaying remains in the century since the ship
sank
To make it to the wreckage, the intrepid sightseers will fly by helicopter from Newfoundland to the expedition's
support yacht in the cold and treacherous waters of the North Atlantic.
After spending two days aboard the yacht, they will endure a five-hour dive to the decaying remains of the
Titanic on the sea bed on a special 'submersible', designed to reach the immense depths.
Here, accompanied by deep ocean experts, they will sail over the ship's deck and should be able to glimpse many of its most famous sights, including its famous grand staircase.
The trip will be open to just nine people at a time and comes with an eye-watering price tag of £86,500 a ticket.
The Cyclops 2 submersible can seat five people and dive to a depth of 13,124ft (4,000m)
The Titanic shipwreck continues to have untold
fascination more than a century after it sank
These images - made from sonar and more than
100,000 photos taken seven years ago by unmanned,
underwater robots - show part of a huge map of the
Titanic debris
A small portion of a comprehensive map of the three-by-five-mile debris field surrounding the stern of the
Titanic on the bottom of the North Atlantic Ocean
Taking inflation into account, this is the equivalent of a first class ticket to board the Titanic when it set sail on its doomed maiden voyage in 1912.
The trip is described by the London-based travel firm as a 'once-in-a-lifetime experience and an expedition designed only for those with a truly adventurous spirit'.
The first dive will take place next May and a second is planned for the summer of 2019.
While Blue Marble Private is selling seats on the trips for wealthy explorers – described as 'mission specialists' - they will be run by OceanGate Expeditions.
Stockton Rush, OceanGate's chief executive, told Forbes: 'Since her sinking 105 years ago, fewer than 200 people have visited the wreck.
'Less than have flown to space or climbed Mount Everest, so this is an incredible opportunity.'
But he added: 'We recognise that the entire site is a memorial, and we undertake our mission with great respect for those who lost their lives in the sinking.'
The Titanic sank on April 14, 1912, four days into its voyage from Southampton to New York
The gymnasium of the Titanic is pictured, with TW McCawley, 'physical educator or trainer', on a rowing
machine and Harland & Wolffe electrician William Parr on a mechanical camel
The Titanic is pictured leaving Southampton on April 10, 1912, four days before it went down
The first class lounge on the Titanic, seen on January 4, 1912, four months before she set sail
To make it to the wreckage, the intrepid sightseers will fly by helicopter from Newfoundland to the expedition's
support yacht in the cold and treacherous waters of the North Atlantic
The company, based in Everett, Washington, owns and operates two five-person submersibles but is building a new craft called Cyclops 2 to visit Titanic.
Renata Rojas, a 49-year-old banker in New York, has already put down a deposit for the trip, and told Forbes that it was her 'life's dream' to visit the wreckage.
Only 140 people have completed the dive to see the Titanic's decaying remains in the century since the ship sank.
The wreckage was not discovered until 1985, and the bow and the stern of the boat, which split in two as it was sinking, lie nearly 2,000ft apart on the ocean floor.
The disaster was famously depicted in the 1997 film with Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet
A dramatic scene from the 1997 film Titanic as the ship sinks in the North Atlantic Ocean
1997 film: In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the Titanic disaster
The ship sank on April 14 1912, four days into its voyage from Southampton to New York, taking the lives of 1,517 of the 2,224 passengers and crew aboard.
In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the Titanic disaster, which was famously depicted in the 1997 film starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet.
In 2012, to mark the centenary of the sinking of the ship, the Titanic Belfast museum opened on the site of the shipyard where the liner was built.
Last year the museum was named as the world's best tourist attraction at the World Travel Awards.
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4323084/Now-tour-Titanic.html#ixzz4blNItJlg
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