(Reuters) - The $250,000-a-head expedition that vanished this week en route to the deep-sea wreck of the Titanic ocean liner is just one example of extreme tourism that is becoming more commonplace ...
Avenue Two Travel CEO and adventure travel enthusiast Joshua Bush skydiving in Dubai. Source: Joshua Bush The fatal deep-sea dive of OceanGate Expeditions' Titan captured the world's attention and ...
On June 18, 2023, the submersible Titan lost contact with the outside world as it approached the wreckage of the Titanic 13,000 feet below sea level at the bottom of the North Atlantic. Among the five ...
June 23 (UPI) --The world watched in shock as rescue crews feverishly searched for the Titan submersible vehicle, which disappeared while attempting to take tourists to view the wreckage of the ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Visiting dangerous areas has been well documented by tourists on social media, yet is it something that should be promoted? (Getty ...
Introduce the captivating paradox of extreme travel—the magnetic pull of the unknown versus the undeniable perils.
The tragic news of the destruction of the Titan submersible has brought attention to the thrilling, dangerous and expensive world of extreme tourism. As a researcher who studies hospitality and ...
Allied Market Research has published a report, titled, “Extreme Tourism Market By Adventure Type (Mountain Climbing, Skydiving, Cave Exploration, Scuba Diving, and Others), Type of Traveler (Solo, ...
Ditching the sunlounger in favour of war-torn environments and ever-present risks may not not be a conventional getaway, but for a select few ‘danger tourists’ this constitutes a holiday. The concept ...