Earth logo

What did man find when he dived into the Marianas Trench, 10,000 meters underwater? Here comes the truth

What did man find when he dived into the Marianas Trench, 10,000 meters underwater? Here comes the truth

By RosetoPublished 2 years ago 3 min read
Like

Introduction: With the continuous progress of science and technology in China, there are now many satellites launched by humans in space. Through these satellites, we can better observe every place on Earth, but from the satellite can only see the general situation on the surface of the Earth, for the land to see more, however, about how the interior of the ocean is no way to detect the satellite. Now we want to explore the ocean usually need to rely on submarines

What did humans find when they dove into the Marianas Trench, 10,000 meters underwater? The truth is here

The Earth is 70% ocean, and we currently divide the Earth's waters into four major oceans, which are vast in size and very deep inside the ocean. Submarines can dive underwater to observe the world of the ocean, but at present people's science and technology are limited.

Now manufactured submarines have not been able to fully dive into the deepest part of the ocean, so the ocean is still mysterious to us, many secrets are waiting for humans to explore.

The world's deepest ocean is the Marianas Trench, this place is located in the Pacific Ocean, in this sea, the water is relatively clear, however, with the depth down, in the sea inside the light will be significantly weakened, and the French explorer Gion Neri in this depth set a world record for the deepest human unarmed dive - 113 meters.

Want to artificially dive into the sea floor to observe the specific situation is very difficult because the pressure in the sea and land is not the same, human beings in the sea can withstand the pressure is limited, but once the body can withstand the scope of the problem will arise, people will hallucinate at this time.

If you dive down to 332 meters in this sea, the pressure generated in the seawater can directly crush a steel plate. If the depth reaches about 1000 meters, this place can penetrate the light is almost no, so in this place around is pitch black, can not see things.

Of course, there are still creatures living below this depth, most of the creatures living in this place do not have eyes, and some creatures have evolved their glowing organs.

Continue to dive 3000 meters, after reaching this depth, people will find that all the creatures in this place are almost no eyes, and there is more than seventy-five percent of the fish can be self-luminous, this light can be used to illuminate and also to warn predators.

And the water pressure in this place is relatively strong, most of the diving materials to here will appear to break, if humans appear in this place, almost in an instant will be broken into pieces. Of course, in general, people who can not reach this depth body will be eaten by other fish.

Continue to dive down to a depth of 7000 meters, to this place after basically no creatures, because the environment in this place is not suitable for survival, too much pressure at the same time there is no suitable food. So the creatures living here are relatively rare, are some rare species.

They do not see the light all year round, just rely on the upper ocean sediment to maintain the energy cycle of the biosphere. China's Jiaolong once dived to 7062 meters, the depth of this dive is currently the maximum depth of submarine dives.

Conclusion: The Marianas Trench is indeed very deep, human detection of the deep sea has only reached about 7000 meters, but the human exploration of the deep sea will not stop there. There are still researchers who want to invent submarines with a stronger capacity to explore the true nature of the Marianas Trench.

Science
Like

About the Creator

Roseto

Science and civilization show that too much information sometimes gets in the way of knowledge and innovation。

Reader insights

Be the first to share your insights about this piece.

How does it work?

Add your insights

Comments

There are no comments for this story

Be the first to respond and start the conversation.

Sign in to comment

    Find us on social media

    Miscellaneous links

    • Explore
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Support

    © 2024 Creatd, Inc. All Rights Reserved.