The Prague Post - France's 'Mr Titanic' hailed after sub implosion

EUR -
AED 4.191534
AFN 73.045296
ALL 93.794042
AMD 418.994907
ANG 2.043442
AOA 1047.18085
ARS 1702.858255
AUD 1.644237
AWG 2.057249
AZN 1.930334
BAM 1.956693
BBD 2.303962
BDT 140.984347
BGN 1.929854
BHD 0.431299
BIF 3404.313438
BMD 1.141331
BND 1.477487
BOB 7.902385
BRL 5.903763
BSD 1.143927
BTN 108.578081
BWP 15.450187
BYN 3.267434
BYR 22370.08606
BZD 2.30066
CAD 1.620126
CDF 2573.700908
CHF 0.922857
CLF 0.026875
CLP 1057.728313
CNY 7.754373
CNH 7.762916
COP 3809.374563
CRC 521.14014
CUC 1.141331
CUP 30.245269
CVE 110.314866
CZK 24.242976
DJF 203.703866
DKK 7.475324
DOP 67.551127
DZD 152.080769
EGP 55.712583
ERN 17.119964
ETB 183.502261
FJD 2.555667
FKP 0.853807
GBP 0.854686
GEL 3.018803
GGP 0.853807
GHS 13.055213
GIP 0.853807
GMD 83.887597
GNF 10032.579027
GTQ 8.72806
GYD 239.281308
HKD 8.950032
HNL 30.621244
HRK 7.534499
HTG 149.649614
HUF 355.596481
IDR 20535.282471
ILS 3.466165
IMP 0.853807
INR 108.583256
IQD 1498.497067
IRR 1569330.017018
ISK 143.602375
JEP 0.853807
JMD 180.163808
JOD 0.809234
JPY 185.279034
KES 147.51677
KGS 99.809601
KHR 4595.157695
KMF 491.913345
KPW 1027.198229
KRW 1721.914767
KWD 0.353538
KYD 0.953239
KZT 536.772046
LAK 25775.99041
LBP 102437.300287
LKR 382.988157
LRD 207.964007
LSL 18.580343
LTL 3.370053
LVL 0.69038
LYD 7.337381
MAD 10.696676
MDL 20.127451
MGA 4850.298747
MKD 61.659096
MMK 2396.130641
MNT 4092.362105
MOP 9.239998
MRU 45.650636
MUR 53.733972
MVR 17.644832
MWK 1983.139888
MXN 19.971385
MYR 4.654002
MZN 72.942327
NAD 18.580425
NGN 1566.739825
NIO 41.909821
NOK 11.173915
NPR 173.726814
NZD 2.003127
OMR 0.438839
PAB 1.143932
PEN 3.888809
PGK 5.027339
PHP 70.228403
PKR 318.038924
PLN 4.301904
PYG 6964.209084
QAR 4.170285
RON 5.234255
RSD 117.350515
RUB 87.312208
RWF 1676.394509
SAR 4.25632
SBD 9.241697
SCR 14.900406
SDG 685.359841
SEK 11.054999
SGD 1.47493
SHP 0.852119
SLE 27.819969
SLL 23933.142939
SOS 653.701223
SRD 42.899172
STD 23623.245736
STN 24.511402
SVC 10.009612
SYP 126.153701
SZL 18.569882
THB 38.082835
TJS 10.57528
TMT 4.006072
TND 3.383459
TOP 2.748051
TRY 53.480141
TTD 7.763645
TWD 36.512344
TZS 2995.988015
UAH 50.907427
UGX 4186.947674
USD 1.141331
UYU 46.040812
UZS 13746.394513
VES 769.356165
VND 30009.013917
VUV 137.12532
WST 3.158952
XAF 656.268031
XAG 0.018869
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.084504
XCG 2.06155
XDR 0.81618
XOF 656.259402
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.552152
ZAR 18.568826
ZMK 10273.344849
ZMW 21.076712
ZWL 367.508091
  • RYCEF

    -0.6200

    19.28

    -3.22%

  • NGG

    0.5200

    83.11

    +0.63%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    68.32

    0%

  • GSK

    0.2300

    53.32

    +0.43%

  • RIO

    -2.3300

    91.25

    -2.55%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    13.05

    -0.23%

  • BTI

    0.3400

    61.8

    +0.55%

  • BCE

    0.5300

    21.4

    +2.48%

  • AZN

    2.9600

    193.12

    +1.53%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    21.98

    -0.36%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.19

    -0.18%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.1

    -0.08%

  • RELX

    0.5400

    32.81

    +1.65%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.4

    -2.56%

  • BP

    1.2200

    38.61

    +3.16%

France's 'Mr Titanic' hailed after sub implosion
France's 'Mr Titanic' hailed after sub implosion / Photo: Joël SAGET - AFP/File

France's 'Mr Titanic' hailed after sub implosion

A French submarine operator and daredevil deep-sea explorer dubbed "Mr Titanic", who died onboard a submersible visiting the wreck of the mythic ship, was hailed on Friday as having helped advance mankind's understanding of the "unknown world".

Text size:

Paul-Henri Nargeolet, 77, was one of five people in the tourist submersible which was revealed on Thursday to have suffered a "catastrophic implosion".

The news brought an end to an international search and rescue mission in the North Atlantic that had captured the world's attention.

Nargeolet had previously gone on more than 30 dives to explore the Titanic, even bringing up some of the first objects recovered from the wreck after its discovery in 1985.

The tight-knit community of French deep-sea explorers were quick to express their grief.

Bernard Cauvin, head of the Cite de la Mer maritime museum in Cherbourg, western France, said it was "a sad, sad, sad end for a giant of the deep".

Nargeolet "helped humanity understand this unknown world" of the deep sea and had "captivated everyone with his restraint, delicacy and humility," Cauvin added.

Before the sub's fate was revealed on Thursday, Nargeolet's daughter Sidonie told French broadcaster BFMTV that she hoped for a positive outcome.

"But in any case, he is happy where he is. And that is reassuring," she said.

Cauvin said he shared this feeling: "He is happy where he is."

Nargeolet had been expected to attend the opening of a new exhibition in Paris devoted to the Titanic on July 6.

"We salute the passion and courage of this extraordinary explorer and thank him for the dreams and emotions he has given us," the exhibition's organiser Pascal Bernardin said in a statement.

Born in 1946, Nargeolet spent more than two decades in the French navy before joining the French Research Institute for Exploitation of the Sea (IFREMER) in 1986.

The following year, he led the first expedition to collect objects from the wreck.

In 1989, he took over managing the deep-sea sub expeditions of Genavir, the operator of France's oceanographic fleet.

- 'Insatiable explorer' -

"His dives will remain etched in the memory of French oceanography," Genavir's director Eric Derrien said in a statement, lamenting "the disappearance of this insatiable explorer of the ocean".

Xavier Placaud, a manager at Genavir, said he had been on six dives to the Titanic wreck with Nargeolet.

Recounting how together they had explored previously inaccessible parts of the wreck, Placaud said: "These are strong moments that we shared."

Nargeolet lived in the United States working as the director of underwater research for RMS Titanic, which owns the rights to the wreck.

He published the book "In the Depths of the Titanic" last year, the 110th anniversary of the ship's sinking.

The head of the publisher HarperCollins France Emmanuelle Bucco-Cances said she was "deeply saddened" to learn of Nargeolet's death.

"We will remember a passionate, warm and deeply kind man who was an incredible storyteller," she said.

Nargeolet has previously spoken openly about the risks of his exploits in the most inaccessible waters of the world's oceans, often thousands of metres (feet) below sea level.

"When you're in very deep water, you're dead before you realise that something is happening, so it's just not a problem," he told the Irish Examiner newspaper in 2019.

IFREMER said its Atalante ship, which had been sent to the wreck in the hopes of deploying its unmanned deep-sea robot as part of a rescue mission, would start the journey back to France.

R.Krejci--TPP