Message from @🍄The Mad Philosopher🍄
Discord ID: 582341093639716866
Then that opens other possibilities
Good luck
Not sure what it was, but it clearly came from the inside.
Or and this will sound insane
It's a very old wreck slowly collapsing under it's own weight
That magically takes puncture areas and invert them so perfectly?
also if that was the hole I think that would be above the waterline
also it's on a line where two plates are riveted together
Aka a weak point
Man, you just want to deny anything that wasn't taught to you in school or your parents..
Tf
What I said actully makes sense
No, it didn't.
It would be above the waterline
That would not sink it
I have never seen an exploiting on a boat look like that
overheated boiler?
Alonso is there an actual image and not an artists depiction
Show me examples of ships or other materials being damaged from one side and inverting over time so perfectly that it looks like it was damaged from the exact opposite side.
The explosions normally go up
That is normally the weakest part
@🍄The Mad Philosopher🍄 it's on the same welding line as the anchors
If you count the weldings between plates from the deck you will see they are equal
No, it's not.
It is tho
The biggest hole is much lower.
It is one billow, being less likely to be an explosion
It isn't, though..
If a Bomb were on the ship. That is the place you would want to put it, since that area is the weaker part. Like this one that simply collapsed as it was moored at the dock.
The biggest hole was caused by an iceberg
Prove it
It's clearly protruding **OUTWARDS!!**
Not inwards
Because the wreck is collapsing in itself
Prove it
Still waiting
Its under high water pressure and over 100 years old
Problem is, yes. It is protruding outwards. Actual dents made by icebergs don’t easily invert back outwards once they’ve been jammed inwards.
Show me a collapsing frame that goes from an inward indentation to an outward one, rather than continuing to buckle under the already compromised area of damage.