The Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench is the deepest known point in Earth’s oceans. In 2010 the Center for Coastal & Ocean Mapping measured the depth of the Challenger Deep at 10,994 meters (36,070 feet) below sea level with an estimated vertical accuracy of ± 40 meters. That means if Mount Everest, the highest mountain on Earth, were placed at this location it would be covered by over one mile of water.

The first depth measurements in the Mariana Trench were made by the British survey ship HMS Challenger, which was used by the Royal Navy in 1875 to conduct research in the trench. The greatest depth that they recorded at that time was 8,184 meters (26,850 feet).

In 1951, another Royal Navy vessel, also named the “HMS Challenger,” returned to the area for additional measurements. They discovered an even deeper location with a depth of 10,900 meters (35,760 feet) determined by echo sounding. The Challenger Deep was named after the Royal Navy vessel that made these measurements.

In 2009, sonar mapping done by researchers aboard the RV Kilo Moana, operated by the University of Hawaii, determined the depth to be 10,971 meters (35,994 feet) with a potential error of ± 22 meters. The most recent measurement, done in 2010, is the 10,994 meter ( ± 40 meter accuracy) depth.

Credit for this wonderful visualisation of the Deep Sea goes to Neal Agarwal. Here is an interactive version for you to explore the depth of the sea: https://neal.fun/deep-sea/

Want to explore and experience the ocean first hand? Get started with one of our PADI Scuba Diving Courses and become a certified scuba diver!

We wanted to share this cute PADI video for it lists all the reasons for why we became scuba diving instructors and teamed up with PADI to opening up our own dive centre in Bundaberg. We hope you love it as much as we do.

 

Never fall in love with a scuba diver…

He’ll spend every weekend at the beach, and have an uneven tan.
Her hair will never be dry and her kiss will often be salty.

He’ll have a scruffy chin and own more board shorts than ties.

You’ll spend hours flying to places with no mobile reception
and travel miles into the rainforest with people you barely know.

He’ll insist you drink the local beer.
and if you admit to being afraid of sharks, she’ll laugh at you.

He’ll be fascinated by things other people find strange or ugly,
and bubble rings are her way of flirting.

No trip will ever be as interesting as the time he dove with a whale shark,
or the night she danced with villagers in Palau.

They dislike fancy dinners almost as much as wearing shoes,
and would rather immerse themselves in local culture than talk of settling down.

And they can spend hours staring at the ocean, not hearing a word you say…

 


Our thanks to travel blogger Adi Zarsadias at lovethesearch.com for inspiring this video. All credits for this video go to PADI.com