By 1984, Ballard had decided to try again to find the Titanic. This time would be different, though, because this time, he had Argo.
The new submersible worked just as Ballard had imagined it would. In one of the first tests, Ballard used Argo on a secret U.S. Navy mission to explore two sunken submarines. Both subs had vanished in the Atlantic in the 1960s. Using Argo, Ballard quickly located the missing subs— and gleaned a key lesson in the process. The submarines had broken up as they sank, and debris was scattered across more than a mile of the seafloor. Argo—and Ballard—spotted the debris and followed the trail to the wrecks.
Surely the Titanic had also broken apart as it sank, Ballard realized. Furniture and dishes and other objects would have spilled out and been carried by ocean currents. Like a trail of breadcrumbs, the Titanic’s debris could lead to the main part of the wreck.
Or so Ballard hoped.
On August 24, 1985, Ballard and his team were back in the North Atlantic. They directed Argo to the area where the Titanic had most likely sank. Argo’s images flashed onto TV screens. Just as Ballard had envisioned, Argo provided a window into the deep sea.
In the coming days, Argo would reveal deep undersea canyons, giant boulders, and enormous holes in the ocean floor. But mostly the team saw . . . nothing.
The days ticked by with no sign of the Titanic, not even a glint of metal. Ballard started to panic. The U.S. Navy was paying for this mission and had provided the ship and equipment. It had given Ballard a strict deadline, after which he and his team would have to head home.
Was Ballard’s quest to find the Titanic going to end in failure yet again?