The Horrors of the Deep

Plastic literally at the bottom of the ocean. Very sad!

From news.com.au

Man-made horrors lurk at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, the deepest part of the ocean

Way, way down at the deepest point of the ocean lies a disaster of humanity’s own making that will never die – with untold consequences.Shannon Molloy3 min readNovember 24, 2021 – 1:18PM24 comments

A helium balloon decorated with characters from the film Frozen at the bottom of the Mariana Trench. Picture: Mariana Trench – In Pursuit of the Abyss

A helium balloon decorated with characters from the film Frozen at the bottom of the Mariana Trench. Picture: Mariana Trench – In Pursuit of the Abyss

The Mariana Trench is the deepest part of the ocean, and the deepest part of Earth itself, measuring some 11km down.

So unforgiving are the pitch-black, pressured and near-freezing conditions that we know little about what lurks below, with untold marine treasurers still waiting to be discovered.

Scientists consider the absolute lowest beds of the sea to be about as hard to reach as space.

Victor Vescovo was the last human to do so, reaching a new record depth of 10.9km in April 2019 in a Triton 36000/2 submarine, built to withstand the extreme pressure.

Over five dives to the bottom of the Mariana Trench, the American explorer found previously unknown crustacean species, witnessed brightly coloured outcrops and came across a pink snailfish.

Then, scattered throughout a place only two others have ever managed to physically reach, Vescovo saw plastic.

Lolly wrappers and a plastic shopping bag, to be precise.

CHECK OUT NEWS.COM.AU’S NEW YOUTUBE CHANNELhttps://www.youtube.com/embed/oJU8UrFg2rE

Nowhere is safe from humanity

Vescovo’s shock find almost overshadowed his remarkable achievement and the scientific promise of his sea life discoveries.

And for good reason.

“We always had this sense that there was a part of the planet that was beyond, that was untouched by human action,” Eric Galbraith, an ocean biochemist at the Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies in Barcelona and adjunct professor at McGill University in Montreal, told the magazine Maclean’s.

“That used to be true. And now it’s no longer true.”

And unfortunately, Vescovo’s discovery isn’t the first, with previous unmanned voyages to the depths of the Mariana also encountering plenty of plastic pollution.

Showing how extensive the problem is – and how quickly waste can sink down – one dive found the remnants of a helium balloon decorated with characters from the children’s film Frozen, released in 2013.

Vision captured of that dive shows the balloon and, resting next to it, a heavy duty 20-litre plastic bucket.

A scene from the film Mariana Trench – In Pursuit of the Abyss shows plastic waste found by unmanned craft. Picture: YouTube

A scene from the film Mariana Trench – In Pursuit of the Abyss shows plastic waste found by unmanned craft. Picture: YouTube

A Frozen balloon and a plastic bucket was seen in the near-inaccessible area. Picture: YouTube

A Frozen balloon and a plastic bucket was seen in the near-inaccessible area. Picture: YouTube

In 2018, researchers from the Institute of Deep Sea Science and Engineering in China took samples of water and sediment at depths ranging from 2.5km to 11km.

“Man-made plastics have contaminated the most remote and deepest places on the planet,” they wrote in analysis published in the journal Geochemical Perspectives Letters.

“The (deepest Mariana) zone is likely one of the largest sinks for microplastic debris on Earth, with unknown but potentially damaging impacts on this fragile ecosystem.”

Read the rest of the article here

What A Monster!

From the ABC

Monster 23.8m-wave is largest ever recorded in southern hemisphere

Updated 50 minutes ago

A wave-measuring buoy in the Southern Ocean has recorded a massive 23.8-metre wave, according to New Zealand meteorology and oceanography consultancy.

“This is a very exciting event and to our knowledge it is the largest wave ever recorded in the southern hemisphere,” MetOcean Solutions senior oceanographer Dr Tom Durrant said.

The mammoth wave, which formed during a storm, dwarfed the previous record of 19.4m measured by MetOcean Solutions in May 2017, as well as a wave recorded in Australian waters in 2012 that measured 22.03m.

The solar-powered buoy, moored near New Zealand’s Campbell Island, only records wave heights for 20 minutes every three hours.

Because of this, Dr Durrant said it was “very probable” even larger waves could have occurred during this storm.

“It is likely that the peak heights during this storm were actually much higher, with individual waves greater than 25m being possible as the wave forecast for the storm show larger wave conditions just north of the buoy location,” Dr Durrant said.

But storms such as this have do not just affect coasts in the Southern Ocean.

“The persistent and energetic wind conditions here create enormous fetch for wave growth, making the Southern Ocean the engine room for generating swell waves that then propagate throughout the planet — indeed surfers in California can expect energy from this storm to arrive at their shores in about a weeks’ time,” Dr Durrant said.

“[This] storm is the perfect example of waves generated by the easterly passage of a deep low-pressure system with associated wind speeds exceeding 65 knots.

“Such storms are frequent and can occur at any time of the year, which differs from the high-latitude northern hemisphere storms that only occur in winter.”

Dr Durrant said what makes this storm particularly interesting is that its speed appears to match the wave speed, which he says allows wave heights to grow dramatically.

Significant wave height is the value used by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) to characterise sea state, MetOcean Solutions said.

“During this storm, the significant wave height reached 14.9m. This is also a record for the Southern Ocean, but falls short of the 19m world record buoy measurement that was recorded in the North Atlantic during 2013.”