How Deep Is the Ocean In Reality?

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Published 2018-08-13
A whopping 94% of all life-forms on Earth are aquatic. Such a huge number of living beings who can't survive without water is understandable. After all, more than 70% of our planet's surface is covered with water. The World Ocean includes the Pacific Ocean, the Atlantic Ocean, the Indian Ocean, and the Arctic Ocean. There's enough water in the oceans to fill a 685-mile-long bathtub! One of the main nagging questions people have been asking for ages is "How deep is the ocean in reality?" Let’s find an answer to it.

#marianatrench #deepplace #deepocean

TIMESTAMPS
Sunlit zone 1:21
Twilight zone 6:17
Midnight zone 10:19
The abyss 13:17
Trench zone 14:25

Music:
youtube.com/audiolibrary/music

SUMMARY
-The Sunlit zone stretches from 14.5 ft, that is is the depth of a standard Olympic diving pool, to 561 ft under the water’s surface, where RMS Carpathia found her last dwelling. This ship became famous after her participation in the rescue of the Titanic survivors.
-At 656 ft, the twilight zone begins. That's where you can see the giant oarfish. At a depth of 1,453 ft, you could reach the height of the Empire State Building if somebody powerful enough decided to submerge it under the water. The giant squid lives as deep as 2,952 ft below the surface. This is where the Twilight zone ends.
-At a depth of 3,608 ft, there's the deepest volcano recorded by scientists. At 12,795 ft below the water’s surface, there are Air France flight 447 black boxes. Airbus A330 crashed into the Atlantic Ocean in 2009. This is where the Midnight zone ends.
-At a depth of 13,123 ft, the midnight zone ends, and the abyss lies ahead. 18,897 ft is the bottom of the abyss and the depth at which you can find the deepest shipwreck. SS Rio Grande sunk in 1941 in the South Atlantic and was discovered only in 1996.
-At a depth of 19,685 ft, the abyss ends and gives way to the trench zone. At a depth of 36,070 ft, you will reach the very bottom of the ocean in its deepest point known to man: Challenger Deep.

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All Comments (21)
  • @lexigowen7925
    the fact that we have only discovered 5% of the ocean and it goes deeper just gives me the chills
  • @armnbepry
    Long answer: This video


    Short answer: PRETTY DEEP...
  • @ChaosDraguss
    "Would you dare to go down to the bottom of the Mariana trench?" I don't even go to the deep side of the pool
  • According to the U.S. Geological Survey, there are over 332,519,000 cubic miles of water on the planet.
    So, that's a little more than a 685-mile long bathtub.
  • @theweeknd2725
    you forgot to mention that a talking sponge also lives there
  • @jrgilbert
    It's fascinating that there are still unknowns in the ocean. In other words, we don't even know if we have found the deepest part of the ocean. To me that is amazing.
  • "The ocean has enough water to fill a 685-mile long bath tub,'' Yeah a few trillion times over.
  • @kurisktan
    The Ocean has a lot of secrets and the Mariana can't be the deepest.
  • @josh0147
    The real question is: where did the martini meter go?
  • @dongskitv
    I feel like I can't breath while watching this lol
  • @rileybeach3984
    The fact that the Atlantic Ocean's deepest point Milwaukee Deep has been less explored than Challenger Deep, it just may be hiding some mysteries of the Bermuda Triangle. After all, it is at the bottom of the Bermuda Triangle. Maybe there are some ship remains in the Puerto Rico Trench that have yet to be disocovered.
  • @Barbutt
    I can’t believe all these things are lined up in the same place in such a vast ocean.

    Amazing!
  • @razieltalos
    Honestly this gives me quite the sense of dread, the crushing depths, the isolation, the pitch black. As soon as they mentioned the cracked windows it gave me a shiver, The thought of being crushed to death in less than a second at that depth is just horrifying
  • @jainayak666
    Ahh, the twilight zone. If you descend to those depths, you'll find most of my relationships ..
  • @MTF.NU-7
    Space and the ocean are both equally terrifying. However the ocean is limited. Space has no known limits. It’s quite terrifying to think about either and what lies in them
  • @f4f471
    685 mile long bath tub is way too short , that cannot be correct!