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“Tim Maltin has shown that there was a strong superior-mirage display in the ice-field where Titanic sank, using both archival weather records and the logs of numerous ships in the area. The mirage and related refraction phenomena, such as looming, contributed to the confusion at the time of the accident. In particular, he has established that the crews of the Titanic and Californian saw each other’s signals, but were unable to interpret them because of atmospheric effects acting in the unexpectedly large distance between the two ships.” — Dr Andrew T. Young – Atmospheric refraction expert, San Diego State University
“Defenders of Captain Stanley Lord have long tried to rewrite the history books by claiming that Lord’s vessel, the Californian, was well beyond visual range of the sinking Titanic on the night of April 14/15, 1912. Tim Maltin’s groundbreaking research goes a long way toward explaining why these revisionist claims are untrue and why peculiar atmospheric conditions led the Californian’s crewmen to mistakenly believe that the rocket-firing ship they were observing that night could not have been the Titanic…Starting from a completely fresh perspective and utilizing brand new sources of information, Tim Maltin has added crucial missing pieces to key puzzles surrounding the Titanic saga, and researchers everywhere should be grateful for his outstanding contributions to the subject.” — George Behe, author of On Board RMS Titanic, Vice President, Titanic Historical Society 1992-96
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