The Titanic may have been the most famous ship in history since it charmed even after 106 years of its disappearance when it became the largest passenger ship in the world, but its sinking in the first flight was a tragedy in which more than 1,500 people were killed.

The ship sank on 15 April 1912 on its first journey from Southampton, UK, to New York in the United States. How was it found?

Robert Ballard, who took part in secret US naval missions, took the adventure of finding the remains of the Titanic, according to a report by the BBC.

Ballard believed the Titanic remains on the brink of extinction from the ocean floor. When the Navy's deputy chief of naval operations, Rear Admiral Rannell Thanman, came up with the idea of ​​looking for it, his reaction was that "this is madness," but before Balard's request.

The navy provided the necessary means to search for the vehicle, and Ballard used the means to find two US nuclear submarines that had sunk into the Atlantic in the 1960s.

The search for Taitenk was part of a secret mission approved by President Ronald Reagan himself, and was completed in September 1985 and completed the mission, the website said.

In the cold war between the former Soviet Union and the United States, Ballard had two missions on a single mission. The first part of the mission was a resounding success. Balard found the American submarines Threcher and Escorpion.

Ballard had spent the rest of his time searching for Titenk, but he had only 12 days to find the ship, especially since the vehicle he was using was rented.

The Ballard team found the ship at a depth of four kilometers and about six hundred kilometers from the coast of Newfoundland in Canada (Pixabee)

Ballard's experience in his search for Escorbion has only been able to find Titanic in just eight days, while others have been unable to search for it for sixty days to no avail, Ballard says.

Ballard said his team found the ship at a depth of four kilometers, about 600 kilometers from the coast of Newfoundland, Canada, and that they had experienced moments of joy when they saw the remains, but that happiness soon faded.

"We have prepared the moments of seriousness, serenity and respect, and we have committed ourselves not to take anything from this ship and to treat it respectfully," he said, adding that they had no plans to withdraw the ship or its inventory.