A SHAPESHIFTING robot submarine has reached Earth’s deepest point – 36,000ft underwater – in search of deep-sea “aliens”. The ...
Narrator: They're small, transparent sea cucumbers that crawl along the ocean floor on tentacle-like legs. But perhaps the most surprising thing you'll discover inside the Mariana Trench is this ...
IN the modern age, it’s hard to imagine that there’s anywhere on Earth that we haven’t fully explored. But there are surprisingly large chunks of Earth that civilisation has yet ...
Despite advancements in technology and seabed mapping, a large part of the ocean floor remains unexplored. In fact, more people have been to the moon than to the bottom of the Mariana Trench.
Yet we know very little about their inhabitants, especially on the ocean floor. Since the 1960s, multiple missions—some autonomous, others manned—have sought to explore the deepest part of the Pacific ...
Scientists have made a groundbreaking discovery in the deepest place on Earth, the Mariana Trench, encountering species ...
Fendouzhe, China's self-developed human occupied vehicle, operates in the seabed at Mariana Trench on Nov 8 ... the deepest part of the ocean floor, and identified 7,564 species of hadal ...
Found along the Mariana Trench, this natural phenomenon is an example of the astoundingly deep and unknown areas that exist below the ocean floor. The Mariana Trench is itself a gigantic crescent ...
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.
In 2014, scientists first heard a unique sound coming from the waters around the Mariana Trench. Experts weren't sure what it was, but now a team of researchers led by Oregon State University have ...
Scientists sampled fish living in the Pacific's Mariana Trench and trenches in the Indian Ocean. . | Credit: Han Xu et al. (2025) Evolution and genetic adaptation of fishes to the deep sea.