CopperZepher
Oct 17 2005, 11:08 PM
Well me and another person that I know were having an argument about how deep the deepest part of the ocean really is. So I did alot of Googling and research and found this: The Deepest Ocean is the Pacific Ocean. The Deepest PART of the Pacific Ocean is called the Mariana's Trench. The depth of the deepest part of the Mariana's Trench is ROUGHLY 7 miles. It's more like 6.78 miles, but alot of sites have it different. If you were to take Bainbridge Island, WA, and take the length from the very south point, to the very north point, and put it in the deepest part of the ocean, it would stick out about 3-5 miles. If you were to put an equal height of Mount Everest into the Mariana's Trench, it would be gone. Now, this was about a week ago, so I don't remember all the links and such of my sources, but here is a list of what I can remember: National Geographic Wikipedia Microsoft Encarta 2004 Ask Yahoo! and various geocities, tripod, and angelfire sites. And THAT is what I learned!
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jlhaslip
Oct 18 2005, 12:28 AM
And did you know that there are plants and fish-type critters that live down there? Some of them use the sulphur from fissures to sustain themselves rather than oxygen. And the absense of light is overcome by using a form of radar instead of vision. Quite an interesting topic when you think about it.
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floresid
Oct 18 2005, 01:19 AM
Is that 7 miles from the sea level, from the ocean bottom where the tremch starts? Great topic, I knew about the tremch, but intrigued to learn the other facts.
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CopperZepher
Oct 18 2005, 01:36 AM
1. Yes it is true. I THINK I also heared about these creatures and stuff are the only NON-Carbon based life on the planet? Maybe I'm wrong... 2. It is 7 miles from sea level. I know it seems shallow, but trust me, you have a better chance of surviving in Space without a suit or anything... Billions of gallons of water over your head, you would be crushed into like nothing. You can survive in Space for 30 seconds without oxygen, because after that, you will either freeze, or breathe in and die. There is no air, nor is there pressure. Your lungs must be completely empty in order for it to work... Don't try this at home!! lol
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BordaForx
Oct 18 2005, 02:12 AM
It's funny how an arguement can turn educational. Also: I never knew that. Quite interesting.
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pn4yy_bebe
Oct 19 2005, 10:23 PM
thats interesting.... this is very educational =D
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TiKiRoKhaN
Oct 19 2005, 10:49 PM
I live in california, near the coast. I mean darn that water can get cold,  like he said about the pacific ocean, alot of interestin things ^^. But from that I learned a few things I never knew b4
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Lozbo
Oct 21 2005, 02:42 AM
I was watching something about this on discovery channel, and how the creatures and plants that lived there managed to survive, and actually, this sulfure substances power this things up, but i dont understand what they do to support all this pressure, their bodys, muscles and bones or whatever they have must be hard as hell...
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amhso
Oct 21 2005, 04:02 AM
yeah. lots of bacteria are down there since they can live in extreme conditions. well i dont like the ocean much. lozbo, just an idea, maybe if you took a living being from the bottom to the top...and they'd pop...from no pressure, just like we'd pop if we went into space.
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fffanatics
Oct 21 2005, 04:08 AM
Do you what else is interesting. We know more about outer space then we know about our own oceans. Like yes we know a fair amount about what lives and relatively shallow areas of the ocean but very little is know about the deepest depths of the ocean like this trench. The reason is that the pressure is so great we have not been able to accomplish the task of getting there plus it seems that funding for those expeditions is lacking thus it is hard to accomplish this.
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matto
Jul 11 2006, 08:41 PM
Yeah, I learned about this earlier in the school year in my Marine Science class. Quite interesting. QUOTE(fffanatics @ Oct 20 2005, 09:08 PM)  Do you what else is interesting. We know more about outer space then we know about our own oceans. Like yes we know a fair amount about what lives and relatively shallow areas of the ocean but very little is know about the deepest depths of the ocean like this trench. The reason is that the pressure is so great we have not been able to accomplish the task of getting there plus it seems that funding for those expeditions is lacking thus it is hard to accomplish this.
I wouldn't say that... In fact, I'd say quite the opposite! We know hardly anything at all about Outer Space, we just have unproven theories that should be true if so and so is true, which is only true if so and so is true. There's no way we can actually find out, which is not the case for Oceans as they are close to being in our grasp.
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Panzer
Jul 11 2006, 06:26 PM
Well.... Its true! My Dad is a geologist and not too long ago he did some work near there and he told be about it. The tallest mountain in the world actually is in the Pacific Ocean as well, its taller than Mt Everest. But since its submerged it doesnt really "count"
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midnightvamp
Jul 11 2006, 05:25 PM
Wow.... I certainly learned a lot of good stuff in this thread that I never even really thought about before. I never thought of something from that deep not being able to survive without the pressure from below. But that totally makes sense. I think the next book I find to read might just have to be something about the oceans. Thanks for an interesting (and educational) topic!
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keseldude92
Jul 11 2006, 02:19 PM
The Pacific Ocean is the largest ocean on Earth that is surrounded by the Ring of Fire. It is also the deepest ocean with many trenches. Many sea creatures live there that we are not aware of. Maybe there is an entire civilization at the bottom of the ocean that is superior to ours. I guess we won't know until someone acutally makes something that can withstand all of the pressure of the ocean.
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JC05
Oct 25 2005, 05:14 AM
I think that the trench is very interesting! But i'm sure we do know more about the universe than the ocean. I mean, we allready want to go live on mars!
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