Iceberg Danger
There is not, nor is there ever likely to be, an iceberg as famous as the nameless chunk of Arctic ice that gouged the side of the RMS Titanic in April 1912. Built to be "unsinkable," the ship struck an iceberg on her maiden voyage. Rather than striking head-on (which the ship likely would have survived), the ship grazed the iceberg below the waterline, creating a long gash that allowed water into multiple compartments. As the ship slowly filled with water, passengers fled on lifeboats. But there weren't enough lifeboats for all aboard, and the strange, slow pace at which the disaster unfolded led many lifeboats to be launched partly full, because passengers didn't think the situation was that serious [source: Eaton]. The result: 1,500 people lost their lives in the icy North Atlantic waters a few hundred miles south by southeast of St. John's, Newfoundland (accounts vary on the exact number of casualties).

Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Graphic from the Illustrated London News, 1912: Survivors watch from the lifeboats as the ill-fated White Star liner, the Titanic, plunges beneath the waves.
The International Ice Patrol sends out flights of C-130 Hercules aircraft to find icebergs. They also collect ice-sighting data from ships in the area. All the information is fed into a computer that uses tracking models and oceanic current information to estimate where the known icebergs will float to and when they'll get there. They provide this information via the Internet and radio to all nearby ships. In addition, advanced radar systems on each ship can spot larger bergs miles away, even in fog or storms. While the problems caused by icebergs have dropped dramatically since the early 20th century, the risk will never disappear completely.
The Coast Guard has experimented with different ways to track icebergs, including spraying them with brightly colored dyes or planting radio transmitters on them. They've even tried different ways to destroy icebergs, mostly by dropping bombs on them [source: International Ice Patrol].
The Lady of the Lake sank in the Grand Banks with 70 aboard en route to Quebec in 1833 [source: Titanic-Titanic.com]. S.S. Hanshedtoft hit an iceberg and sank off of Cape Farewell, Greenland, in 1959. The ship was on her maiden voyage -- 95 people died, and there were no survivors [source: National Geographic News, International Ice Patrol]. |

