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How long can you survive in air pockets?

How long can you survive in air pockets?

If the pressurized air pocket were about 216 cubic feet (6 cubic m), Umansky reckoned, it would contain enough oxygen to keep Okene alive for about two-and-a-half days, or 60 hours. But there is an additional danger: carbon dioxide (CO2), which is lethal to humans at concentrations of about 5 percent.

What happens to bodies trapped in sunken ships?

They decompose, they are eaten and anything left over dissolves directly into the seawater; eventually, nothing is left- not even the bones.

How did people survive when the Titanic broke in two?

Anyone stuck in the forward decks likely died before the ship broke in two. Some people stuck in the stern may have survived until the entire section was under water. While there aren’t many water tight spaces inside the ship, a closed room may have flooded more slowly than the open corridors around it.

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What are the odds of being trapped on a sinking ship?

The odds of you being trapped on a sinking ship are extremely low thanks to today’s advances in safety and technology. However, there are still occasional disasters such as with car and passenger ferries.

Can a submarine survive if the ship hits the ocean floor?

Certainly they did NOT survive until the ship reached the floor of the ocean at that point, … some 12,000 feet down, and then did a lingering death. Remember, even the most modern of designed submarines had a maximum depth they can reach before they are crushed by the tremendous pressures of the water column above them.

What is the atmospheric pressure on the Titanic?

The wreck of Titanic lies on 3784 m. The hydrostatic pressure down there is immense – approximately 378 bar – which translates into 37 850 000 Pa (37.8 megapascals) of pressure in scientific terms. [The normal sea surface atmospheric pressure is 1.013 bar or 1013 hectopascals.]