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  • The deep sea is a strange and unusual place.

  • It's maybe the most enigmatic on our entire planetand we've barely scratched the

  • surface where exploring it is concerned.

  • But what, exactly, ARE the reasons keeping us from learning everything about the deepest,

  • darkest depths?

  • This is Unveiled, and today we're answering the extraordinary question: why do the deepest

  • parts of the ocean remain a mystery?

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  • One of the biggest reasons we haven't explored much of the deep ocean is, simply, that it's

  • extremely difficult.

  • Before the last hundred years or so, it was immensely hard to explore the sea.

  • It's taken advances not just in submersibles, but in robotics, so that we can safely send

  • remote probes down into the sea without having to build pressurized, crewed vessels.

  • We didn't really have large, usable submarines until the First World Waralthough, history

  • buffs will know that older versions did exist, and that submarines were actually used in

  • combat during the American Civil War in the 1860s.

  • We also had to make do with bulky diving suits, developed in the early 18th century, as well

  • as diving bells.

  • Diving bells go further back, all the way to Ancient Greece, and are still used today,

  • but offer limited mobility compared to other means of exploring the ocean.

  • A big motivator in the development of diving, specifically, was money.

  • Humans have been diving since time immemorial.

  • In some cultures, freediving is practiced to harvest resources such as sponges and pearls.

  • In more modern times, diving expeditions have been conducted to salvage treasures from sunken

  • ships.

  • Today, we have many alternative means to gather resources, such as through industrial fishing

  • and deep-sea trawlers.

  • This means that diving has become increasingly a recreational activity.

  • These days, ocean research only receives a small amount of public funding, in stark contrast

  • to the time when undersea ventures could bring about massive profits.

  • There IS still money to be made from the sea, but only on large scales, and there's little

  • diving required to do so.

  • Plus, commercial ventures are often at odds with ocean research, which prioritizes conservation.

  • Overfishing is a big threat to ocean diversity, and we definitely don't want the onus of

  • ocean exploration to fall on industrial fishing companies that are incentivized by short-term

  • profits to damage these environments.

  • Ocean research organizations like NOAA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

  • in the US, are desperately underfunded.

  • While even space research is arguably underfunded, ocean research is more so, and doesn't carry

  • the public allure that space does.

  • That's one of the reasons why we've famously only mapped 5% of the ocean in detail.

  • Only a third of the seafloor around the US has been mapped with modern sonar.

  • NOAA wants to explore the seas, but without more money, it's not going to be able to

  • do so.

  • There are still more reasons the oceans are mysterious, however, other than just a lack

  • of funding and research.

  • Put simply, the sea is dangerous.

  • Being a fisher is one of the deadliest professions in the entire world, with some studies even

  • putting it as THE deadliest profession, and that's all down to the danger of the ocean

  • itself.

  • The big danger is the weather.

  • Fishing in the tropics brings the risk of hurricanes, with high wind speeds and enormous

  • waves.

  • These can easily send fishers overboard, where the drowning risk is very high.

  • Severe storms can also sink entire ships, not just because of the winds but because

  • of other phenomena, like waterspouts or whirlpools.

  • Even underwater creatures aren't safe, with hurricanes affecting the seafloor.

  • Plus, while it's easy to imagine waves as only happening on the surface of the ocean,

  • that's not true.

  • Frighteningly, there are underwater waves the height of skyscrapers, far taller than

  • even the biggest tsunamis.

  • They break underwater, too.

  • This all combines to make underwater exploration very dangerous both above and below the surface

  •  

  • Finally, beyond the extreme weather, there's the pressure.

  • The pressure in the deepest parts of the sea is strong enough to crush you instantly if

  • you were suddenly exposed to it, which would certainly be an unpleasant way to go.

  • The pressure at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, down in Challenger Deep, is more than

  • 1,000 times the atmospheric pressure at sea level.

  • It's so intense that even some submersibles DESIGNED to weather these depths, like the

  • Nereus, have been destroyed by the pressure.

  • There's the wildlife to consider, too.

  • While the sea creatures living at this depth have probably never seen a human before and

  • may not recognize a human as either a threat or potential food, there is always the chance

  • that some deep-dwelling monster might attack.

  • Luckily, there are very few cases of this happening.

  • Most shark attacks, for instance, happen around beaches, and even the largest shark in the

  • world, the Great White Shark, doesn't usually dive too deep.

  • There are stories of that OTHER deep-sea giant, the giant squid, attacking humansbut not

  • a single one has ever been truly substantiated.

  • The elusive creature has only been captured on camera in the wild a handful of times,

  • and nobody actually knows how big they can get.

  • That's one reason they're so mysterious, because they live so deep, in the sea's

  • twilight zone, that they're hard to find.

  • They don't usually come close to the surface at all.

  • There ARE a handful of credible stories of cephalopods attacking humans, but these are

  • often octopuses that have been provoked.

  • If humans decide we really want to explore the deepest ocean trenches in small submarines,

  • a giant squid COULD, in theory, cause some troublebut it's just as likely that

  • the squid would swim away from any large object.

  • They're a primary food source for sperm whales, after all, and have exceptional vision.

  • They'd see us coming long before we could reach one.

  • Exploring the sea is so difficult and treacherous that even when we DO know roughly where things

  • are, it can be impossible to study them fully.

  • We KNOW where Challenger Deep is, for instance, but almost nobody has seen it and we still

  • know very little about it.

  • For a key example of just how difficult ocean exploration is, you need only look at shipwrecks.

  • There's estimated to be as many as three million shipwrecks in the sea, going back

  • thousands of years, with many of them unidentified.

  • Among them are many missing ships that we've looked for, but have been unable to find.

  • For instance, the Titanic is arguably the most famous shipwreck in the world, but the

  • wreck wasn't found until 1985, 73 years after it sank in 1912.

  • That's despite there being many survivors, a huge rescue effort, and people knowing exactly

  • where it sank.

  • There were many failed attempts at finding it before a FrenchAmerican expedition successfully

  • did so.

  • In the end, it WAS found, in two pieces and resting on an abyssal plane, 12,500 feet below

  • the surface

  •  

  • Many more famous missing ships and planes are still out there, too, like those in the

  • Bermuda Triangle.

  • Scientists agree that there's nothing remotely supernatural about the Triangle, it's simply

  • a very busy part of the sea prone to extreme weather events.

  • But that doesn't mean that those missing ships aren't still worth investigating.

  • The USS Cyclops is out there somewhere, and perhaps someday its wreck will be found, too,

  • much like the Titanic.

  • Even the most enticing shipwrecks, like those thought to contain masses of treasure, aren't

  • always found though.

  • The 1715 Treasure Fleet from Spain boasted 11 ships in its ranks; all were sunk in a

  • devastating hurricane off the coast of Florida.

  • A French frigate, which had sailed with the ship but remained further out, survived.

  • Three of the sunk ships still haven't been found to this day.

  • We know where they sank, when they sank, where most of the wrecks are, and have had over

  • 300 years to find them, and we still haven't managed it even with hundreds of millions

  • of dollars in gold at stake.

  • THAT's how difficult ocean exploration really is.

  • Do YOU think it's worth it to explore the oceans?

  • Let us know!

  • Ultimately, the seas are fascinating places, but exploring them is challenging and dangerous,

  • thanks to extreme weather events and pressure deep underwater.

  • And that's why the deepest parts of the ocean remain a mystery.  

  • What do you think?

  • Is there anything we missed?

  • Let us know in the comments, check out these other clips from Unveiled, and make sure you

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The deep sea is a strange and unusual place.

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