OceanGate Was Warned of Potential for ‘Catastrophic’ Problems with Titanic Mission

This undated photo handed out in June 2021 shows OceanGate
Expeditions’ Titan submersible. OCEANGATE EXPEDITIONS PHOTO VIA AP.
This undated photo handed out in June 2021 shows OceanGate Expeditions’ Titan submersible. OCEANGATE EXPEDITIONS PHOTO VIA AP.
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OceanGate Was Warned of Potential for ‘Catastrophic’ Problems with Titanic Mission

This undated photo handed out in June 2021 shows OceanGate
Expeditions’ Titan submersible. OCEANGATE EXPEDITIONS PHOTO VIA AP.
This undated photo handed out in June 2021 shows OceanGate Expeditions’ Titan submersible. OCEANGATE EXPEDITIONS PHOTO VIA AP.

Few years ago, OceanGate Expeditions faced several warnings of potentials for ‘catastrophic’ problems as it prepared for its ‘hallmark’ mission of taking wealthy passengers to tour the Titanic’s wreckage, a media report revealed.

It was January 2018, when OceanGate’s director of marine operations, David Lochridge filed a lawsuit after the company fired him for sparking “serious safety concerns about the design of the untested experimental model of Titan, the company’s submersible.”

According to The New York Times, David Lochridge was working on a report around that time, ultimately producing a document in which he said the craft needed more testing and stressed “the potential dangers to passengers of the Titan as the submersible reached extreme depths.”

In the documents, Lochridge reported learning that the viewport that lets passengers see outside the craft was only certified to work in depths of up to 1,300 meters, although OceanGate was planning to take tourists to nearly 4,000 meters below the ocean’s surface.

The lawsuit document also pointed out that “OceanGate refused to pay the cost of a viewport that meets the targeted depth (4,000 meters) to the company building the submersible.”

“The paying passengers would not be aware, and would not be informed, of this experimental design,” lawyers for Lochridge wrote in a court filing.

Instead of looking into Lochridge’s concerns, or fixing the submersible, the company fired and sued him for violating an agreement of not sharing confidential information outside the company.

OceanGate has said in court records that “he was not an engineer, that he refused to accept information from the company’s engineering team and that acoustic monitoring of the hull’s strength was better than the kind of testing that Mr. Lochridge felt was necessary.”

Two months later, OceanGate faced similarly dire calls from more than three dozen people — industry leaders, deep-sea explorers and oceanographers — who warned in a letter to its chief executive, Stockton Rush, that the company’s “experimental” approach and its decision to forgo a traditional assessment could lead to potentially “catastrophic” problems with the Titanic mission, which might have heavy consequences that affect every person in this industry.

“While this may demand additional time and expense, it is our unanimous view that this validation process by a third-party is a critical component in the safeguards that protect all submersible occupants,” the signatories wrote.

Rush responded that “the industry standards were stifling innovation. Titan craft was so innovative, it could take years to get it certified by the usual assessment agencies.”

Rush is one of five people onboard of the submersible.

Rescue teams from Canada, France, and the U.S. have been racing to find the submersible, which disappeared near the wreck of the Titanic, nearly 4,000 meters below the ocean’s surface, in the north Atlantic.

In February, a couple in Florida sued Rush, saying that his company refused to refund them the $105,000 that they each paid to visit the Titanic on the Titan in 2018. The trip was postponed several times, according to the suit, in part because the company said it needed to run more tests on the Titan. The couple claimed that Rush reneged on his promise of giving them a refund and that the company instead demanded that they participate in a July 2021 voyage to the wreckage.

In a court filing last year, OceanGate referenced some technical issues with the Titan during the 2021 trip.

“On the first dive to the Titanic, the submersible encountered a battery issue and had to be manually attached to its lifting platform,” the company’s legal and operational adviser, David Concannon, wrote in the document. The submersible sustained ‘modest’ damage to its exterior, he wrote, leading OceanGate to cancel the mission so it could make repairs.

Still, Concannon wrote in the filing, 28 people were able to visit the Titanic wreckage on the Titan last year.



Scientists Genetically Engineer Wolves with White Hair and Muscular Jaws

This undated photo provided by Colossal Biosciences shows two pups that were genetically engineered with similarities to the extinct dire wolf. (Colossal Biosciences via AP)
This undated photo provided by Colossal Biosciences shows two pups that were genetically engineered with similarities to the extinct dire wolf. (Colossal Biosciences via AP)
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Scientists Genetically Engineer Wolves with White Hair and Muscular Jaws

This undated photo provided by Colossal Biosciences shows two pups that were genetically engineered with similarities to the extinct dire wolf. (Colossal Biosciences via AP)
This undated photo provided by Colossal Biosciences shows two pups that were genetically engineered with similarities to the extinct dire wolf. (Colossal Biosciences via AP)

Three genetically engineered wolves that may resemble extinct dire wolves are trotting, sleeping and howling in an undisclosed secure location in the U.S., according to the company that aims to bring back lost species.
The wolf pups, which range in age from three to six months old, have long white hair, muscular jaws and already weigh in at around 80 pounds — on track to reach 140 pounds at maturity, researchers at Colossal Biosciences reported Monday.
Dire wolves, which went extinct more than 10,000 years old, are much larger than gray wolves, their closest living relatives today, The Associated Press reported.
Independent scientists said this latest effort doesn't mean dire wolves are coming back to North American grasslands any time soon.
“All you can do now is make something look superficially like something else"— not fully revive extinct species, said Vincent Lynch, a biologist at the University at Buffalo who was not involved in the research.
Colossal scientists learned about specific traits that dire wolves possessed by examining ancient DNA from fossils. The researchers studied a 13,000 year-old dire wolf tooth unearthed in Ohio and a 72,000 year-old skull fragment found in Idaho, both part of natural history museum collections.
Then the scientists took blood cells from a living gray wolf and used CRISPR to genetically modify them in 20 different sites, said Colossal's chief scientist Beth Shapiro. They transferred that genetic material to an egg cell from a domestic dog. When ready, embryos were transferred to surrogates, also domestic dogs, and 62 days later the genetically engineered pups were born.
Colossal has previously announced similar projects to genetically alter cells from living species to create animals resembling extinct woolly mammoths, dodos and others.
Though the pups may physically resemble young dire wolves, "what they will probably never learn is the finishing move of how to kill a giant elk or a big deer," because they won't have opportunities to watch and learn from wild dire wolf parents, said Colossal's chief animal care expert Matt James.
Colossal also reported today that it had cloned four red wolves using blood drawn from wild wolves of the southeastern US's critically endangered red wolf population. The aim is to bring more genetic diversity into the small population of captive red wolves, which scientists are using to breed and help save the species.
This technology may have broader application for conservation of other species because it's less invasive than other techniques to clone animals, said Christopher Preston, a wildlife expert at the University of Montana who was not involved in the research. But it still requires a wild wolf to be sedated for a blood draw and that's no simple feat, he added.
Colossal CEO Ben Lamm said the team met with officials from the US Interior Department in late March about the project. Interior Secretary Doug Burgum praised the work on X on Monday as a “thrilling new era of scientific wonder” even as outside scientists said there are limitations to restoring the past.
“Whatever ecological function the dire wolf performed before it went extinct, it can’t perform those functions" on today's existing landscapes, said Buffalo's Lynch.