told Bloomberg of the RMS Titanic’s submerged wreck.Beginning next spring, Rush has a series of six dives planned to visit the British passenger ship, which caused the deaths of 1,500 when it sunk in 1912. “There are better wrecks,” he conceded, “maybe even more important wrecks, but people don’t know what they are, and it’s hard to sell something when somebody doesn’t know.”Rush’s upcoming Titanic dives — the first in 15 years — have both the goals of being research missions (to better examine sea life around the ship’s remains and create a 3-D model of its debris) and making money: A ticket to be one of a dive’s nine “mission specialists” costs $125,000.In addition to the six- to eight-hour dive to experience the most infamous.
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