News4 mins ago
Seven miles beneath the waves
In a specially designed craft, James Cameron recently completed a descent to the sea bed in the deepest part of the ocean. This was the second such expedition to be undertaken, and Richard Branson is now planning a third.
As a recreational scuba diver, I find the undersea world beautiful and, indeed, fascinating, and I'm all for exploration of the unknown, but I simply couldn’t do what these people do. I’d be terrified! It would be far too much water above my head for comfort.
Would you do it?
As a recreational scuba diver, I find the undersea world beautiful and, indeed, fascinating, and I'm all for exploration of the unknown, but I simply couldn’t do what these people do. I’d be terrified! It would be far too much water above my head for comfort.
Would you do it?
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Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by naomi24. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Oh naomi, the undersea world. What a beautiful part of our planet. I haven't had the opportunity yet, but scuba diving is on my to-do list in the not too distant future.
The Missus lives in fear when we go on holiday and we are anywhere near a sea aquarium complex. Nowadays the viewing windows are 8' high so it is just like being there. I spend hours watching so she always brings a book.
It is purely theoretical of course, but imagine seeing sea creatures in the Mariana Trench that may never have been seen by anyone else.
The Missus lives in fear when we go on holiday and we are anywhere near a sea aquarium complex. Nowadays the viewing windows are 8' high so it is just like being there. I spend hours watching so she always brings a book.
It is purely theoretical of course, but imagine seeing sea creatures in the Mariana Trench that may never have been seen by anyone else.
Wildwood, looking at sea life in a tank is lovely, but bears no comparison to getting in amongst it. The Red Sea is my favourite place. It's just like being in an enormous crystal clear tank full of creatures in such a vast assortment of sizes, and so astonishingly colourful, I always think they could have been created by Disney! Must admit, I'm only a warm water diver though. I don't do it in this country. Brrrr.....
My husband, on the other hand, (a PADI instructor in his spare time) dives anywhere – even under the ice in Scandinavia! He’d do the 7 mile trek without hesitation! Potty! I couldn’t do any of that, but I'd jump at the chance to go into space. I'd love to see the earth from the moon.
Back to the question.
Apparently there are creatures there that we've never seen, but since it's so pitch dark that far down, it isn't teeming with colourful life. I bet some of it looks pretty peculiar though!
My husband, on the other hand, (a PADI instructor in his spare time) dives anywhere – even under the ice in Scandinavia! He’d do the 7 mile trek without hesitation! Potty! I couldn’t do any of that, but I'd jump at the chance to go into space. I'd love to see the earth from the moon.
Back to the question.
Apparently there are creatures there that we've never seen, but since it's so pitch dark that far down, it isn't teeming with colourful life. I bet some of it looks pretty peculiar though!
It would be a quick way to go.
If the housing ruptured, you woldn't drown ... you'd be crushed almost to nothing in a tiny fraction of a second.
I'm not sure I'd have the guts to do it, though.
I'm an Instructor too (BSAC), but the diving here is rubbish. You need to go west a bit, to Poole, Weymouth, etc.
If the housing ruptured, you woldn't drown ... you'd be crushed almost to nothing in a tiny fraction of a second.
I'm not sure I'd have the guts to do it, though.
I'm an Instructor too (BSAC), but the diving here is rubbish. You need to go west a bit, to Poole, Weymouth, etc.
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