Rare necklace was discovered from wreckage of Titanic

Among the wreckage of the Titanic, a full-scale 3D reconstruction of which was made for the first time, a lost necklace was found. This was reported by itv.com.
The jewelry, made from a megalodon tooth, was discovered after the company Magellan used several submersibles for the first full-scale digital scanning of the sunken luxury passenger ship.
The images show a small detail among the debris - a turquoise and gold necklace with a megalodon tooth, from a prehistoric massive shark that lived approximately 20 million years ago.
Despite the discovery, the team was unable to retrieve the necklace because an agreement between the UK and the US prohibits members of the public from removing artifacts from the crash site.
Now, the company hopes that technology driven by artificial intelligence will help identify its owner. The technology will analyze footage of passengers boarding the ship, scan them, and process them using facial recognition technology to catalog the clothing they wore on the day they embarked on their fateful journey.
If analysts can determine who among the passengers wore the necklace, they can start searching for living relatives of the necklace's owner.
The necklace played a key role in the 1997 film "Titanic" starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet in the lead roles.
Although the artifact found is not the same famous necklace created for the film, company CEO Richard Parkinson described the discovery as "amazing, beautiful, and breathtaking." He said the find was incredible considering the size of the crash site.
"What is not quite clear is that the Titanic consists of two parts, and between the bow and the stern, there is a field of debris covering an area of three square miles," he said. "The team mapped the field so meticulously that we could highlight these details."
Earlier, The Gaze reported that researchers had made a full-scale 3D reconstruction of the sunken Titanic, lying at a depth of 3,800 meters in the Atlantic Ocean. It took 200 hours and 700,000 photographs to accomplish this.
Scientists say that the remains of the legendary Titanic are rapidly deteriorating due to time and bacteria. The ship is being attacked by powerful currents, salt corrosion, and bacteria. The most damage is on the starboard side where the officer's cabins were located. Scientists are certain that in the next few years, the condition of the ship will deteriorate much faster, and it may disappear within two decades