London: A new data has revealed that the giant iceberg responsible for sinking the Titanic on its maiden voyage originated from a group of glaciers near southwest Greenland with snow from more than 100,000 years old.


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Grant Bigg from UK's Sheffield University combined observations obtained from 1912 - the year of the Titanic's sinking in the Atlantic Ocean - and modern data on ocean currents and winds.


Bigg used a computer modelling simulation to calculate more about the size and structure of the mega-iceberg which caused the ship disaster.


The iceberg that sank the Titanic on April 14, 1912, was estimated to be 400 feet in length and 100 feet above the ocean surface, giving it 1.5m tonnes in estimated size.


The iceberg, however, had been melting into the water for months prior to the incident. According to Bigg, it was around 1,700 feet long and 75m tonnes in weight.


Bigg's research suggests 1912 was a bad year, with icebergs reported floating much further south than normal.


"The presence of extensive ice was widely reported prior to and following the collision," Bigg wrote in his new book, Icebergs.


Bigg said why the number reaching shipping lanes should vary so much from year to year is unclear, because so many factors - wind direction, sea currents and temperature changes - are involved.


One idea is that the Titanic iceberg broke from its glacier in 1908 when a mild winter accelerated melting and floated south during the much colder winter of 1911-12.


RMS Titanic was a British passenger liner that sank in the North Atlantic Ocean in the early morning of April 15, 1912 after colliding with an iceberg during its maiden voyage from Southampton in UK to New York City in US.


At least 1,517 people were killed when the Titanic sank on April 14, 1912.


Professor Bigg will present his findings at the Cambridge science festival.