The
man who first
discovered the Titanic wreckage says tourists visiting the site are
destroying
the remains of the ship's hull.
"They
are loving the Titanic to
death," oceanographer Robert Ballard said during an interview with
Stephen
Colbert.
Ballard
is using the 100th anniversary of
the ship's sinking to bring attention to what he says is the unnecessary
destruction of the historic site.
"They
are landing on it, crushing
the deck, knocked off the crow's nest, leaving all sorts of garbage," he
said.
Ballard
said one couple was even married
in a submarine that landed on the Titanic's deck, which he called, "a
little over-the-top."
"What
we're trying to do is say,
look, visit the Titanic. But you don't go to Gettysburg with a shovel.
You
don't take belt buckles off the Arizona. So, visit, but don't touch," he
said.
On
Monday, Ballard will host Save
the
Titanic on the National Geographic Channel. Along with keeping
tourists
at arm's length, Ballard has another seemingly unusual idea for saving
the
Titanic from further deterioration: painting it.
"You
can actually paint the Titanic.
When you build supertankers, they are as big as a football field. They
can't
dry dock those suckers anymore," he told Colbert. "They can actually
use robots, very simple, to clean the hull of the ship and they have
paint they
can apply underwater."
Ballard
said he's applied for a permit to
begin painting the Titanic, which is located about 380 miles off
Newfoundland.
And if a good faith effort to keep the tourists off the Titanic's deck
doesn't
work, Ballard said "robot sentries" could be deployed to alert
authorities to trespassers.
Several
events are being held around the
world to mark the 100th anniversary of the ship's sinking.
The Luxor
Hotel is Las Vegas is showcasing items removed from the wreckage in its "Titanic: The
Artifact
Exhibition." Ballard said he's opposed to such efforts, noting that
the Smithsonian and British Museum rejected his offers to bring up
evidence for
display.
"There's
nothing to learn," he
said. "I also went to the survivors, there were 24 of them alive when I
found it. They said leave it. It's the graveyard of my parents."
The
Titanic remains a cultural phenomenon
to this day. Amongst the assortment of Titanic memorabilia, you can even
purchase a 25-foot
inflatable
slide that recreates the ship's sinking.
"What
we're trying to do is say,
look, visit the Titanic. But you don't go to Gettysburg with a shovel.
You
don't take belt buckles off the Arizona. So, visit, but don't touch," he
said.
On
Monday, Ballard will host Save
the
Titanic on the National Geographic Channel. Along with keeping
tourists
at arm's length, Ballard has another seemingly unusual idea for saving
the
Titanic from further deterioration: painting it.
"You
can actually paint the Titanic.
When you build supertankers, they are as big as a football field. They
can't
dry dock those suckers anymore," he told Colbert. "They can actually
use robots, very simple, to clean the hull of the ship and they have
paint they
can apply underwater."
Ballard
said he's applied for a permit to
begin painting the Titanic, which is located about 380 miles off
Newfoundland.
And if a good faith effort to keep the tourists off the Titanic's deck
doesn't
work, Ballard said "robot sentries" could be deployed to alert
authorities to trespassers.
Several
events are being held around the
world to mark the 100th anniversary of the ship's sinking.
The Luxor
Hotel is Las Vegas is showcasing items removed from the wreckage in its "Titanic: The
Artifact
Exhibition." Ballard said he's opposed to such efforts, noting that
the Smithsonian and British Museum rejected his offers to bring up
evidence for
display.
"There's
nothing to learn," he
said. "I also went to the survivors, there were 24 of them alive when I
found it. They said leave it. It's the graveyard of my parents."
The
Titanic remains a cultural phenomenon
to this day. Amongst the assortment of Titanic memorabilia, you can even
purchase a 25-foot
inflatable
slide that recreates the ship's sinking.
Painting of the bow of the Titanic as
plunges into the North Atlantic
Ocean.
Image #762774 : Raymond Wong/National Geographic Stock
Image #762774 : Raymond Wong/National Geographic Stock
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