News

Embark on a captivating journey across the Pacific Ocean, the largest and deepest of Earth’s oceans, covering more than a ...
The Mariana Trench is the deepest part of the world's oceans, plunging to a staggering depth of about 36,000 feet (10,994 ...
A Chinese submersible has discovered thousands of worms and mollusks nearly 10 kilometers (six miles) below sea level in the ...
Discovery of deep-sea chemosynthesis-based communities suggests more life forms exist in unexplored ocean depths, according to a study by Chinese researchers ...
Scientists discovered thriving deep-sea communities powered by chemicals in ocean trenches over 31,000 feet deep.
The researchers used crewed submarines and remotely operated vehicles to collect samples from about 3,900 to 25,300 feet (1,200 to 7,700 m) below the water's surface, in the Mariana Trench in the ...
A Chinese submersible has discovered thousands of worms and molluscs nearly 10 kilometres (six miles) below sea level in the ...
Life thrives in extreme deep-sea conditions, with new discoveries revealing unique ecosystems powered by chemosynthesis.
Structures In The Mariana Trench Appear To Be Converting Energy In A Life-Like Process "A vital function in modern plant, animal, and microbial life, can occur abiotically in a geological ...
Sea life was also found at the bottom, including a Polychaete, known as a bristle worm. Because of the absolute darkness down there, the creature needs no eyes. It is also unusual to find one at ...
Life is surprisingly persistent in the Mariana Trench, the deepest place on Earth. Whether or not you subscribe to the idea that viruses count as “life”, little is known about the ones that ...
The central part of the autonomous instrument that was deployed to measure the oxygen dynamics of the sea-bed in the Mariana Trench at a depth of 11 km. Data documented intensified microbial life ...