Hindustan Times (East UP)

Submersibl­e touches deepest point on Earth

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MARIANA TRENCH IS A DEPRESSION IN THE EARTH’S CRUST THAT IS DEEPER THAN MOUNT EVEREST IS HIGH

BEIJING: China livestream­ed footage of its new manned submersibl­e parked at the bottom of the Mariana Trench on Friday, part of a historic mission into the deepest underwater valley on the planet.

The “Fendouzhe”, or “Striver”, descended more than 10,000 metres (about 33,000 feet) into the submarine trench in the western Pacific Ocean with three researcher­s on board, state broadcaste­r CCTV said.

Only a handful of people have ever visited the bottom of the Mariana Trench, a crescentsh­aped depression in the Earth’s crust that is deeper than Mount Everest is high and more than 2,550 kilometres long.

The first explorers visited the trench in 1960 on a brief expedition, after which there had been no missions until Hollywood director James Cameron made the first solo trip to the bottom in 2012.

Cameron described a “desolate” and “alien” environmen­t.

Video footage shot and relayed by a deep-sea camera this week showed the green-andwhite Chinese submersibl­e moving through dark water surrounded by clouds of sediment as it slowly touched down on the seabed.

Fendouzhe, which has made multiple dives in recent days, had earlier this month set a national record of 10,909 metres for manned deep-sea diving after landing in the deepest known point of the trench, Challenger Deep, just shy of the 10,927-metre world record set by an American explorer in 2019.

The mission on November 10 beamed up the world’s first live video from Challenger Deep.

The submersibl­e, equipped with robotic arms to collect biological samples and sonar “eyes” that use sound waves to identify surroundin­g objects, is making repeated dives to test its capabiliti­es.

It is carrying so much equipment that engineers added a bulbous forehead-shaped protrusion containing buoyant materials to the vessel to help maintain its balance. Fendouzhe, China’s third deep-sea manned submersibl­e, is observing “the many species and the distributi­on of living

things on the seabed”, scientists on board told CCTV.

The water pressure at the bottom of the trench is a crushing eight tons per square inch, around a thousand times the atmospheri­c pressure at sea level, yet scientists have found the dark, frigid waters of the trench to be teeming with life. The Chinese researcher­s will collect specimens for their work, CCTV said.

Previous studies have found thriving communitie­s of singlecell organisms surviving on organic waste that had settled on the ocean floor, but very few large animals. The mission will also conduct research on “deepsea materials,” CCTV said, as China pushes ahead in deep-sea mining.

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