Location of the Mariana Trench
The
Mariana Trench (or
Marianas
Trench) is the
deepest known part
of the world's
oceans, and the lowest
elevation of the surface of the
Earth's
crust.
It is located in the
western Pacific
Ocean
, to the east of the Mariana Islands
. The trench is about long but has a mean
width of only .
It reaches a maximum depth of about at the
Challenger
Deep
, a small slot-shaped valley in its floor, at its
southern end.
Part of the
Izu-Bonin-Mariana
Arc system, the trench forms the boundary between two
tectonic plates, where the western edge of
the
Pacific Plate is
subducted beneath the small
Mariana Plate. Because the Pacific plate is
the largest of all the tectonic plates on Earth, crustal material
at its western edge has had a long time since formation (up to 170
million years) to compact and become very dense; hence its great
height-difference (which translates to water depth) relative to the
higher-riding Mariana Plate, at the point where the Pacific Plate
crust is subducted (is forced down beneath the other). This deep
area is the Mariana trench proper. The movement of these plates is
also responsible for the formation of the Mariana Islands.
At the bottom of the trench, where the plates meet, the
water column above exerts a
pressure of , over one thousand times the
standard
atmospheric pressure at sea level. Some creatures of the type
normally encountered that could live at these depths are few, but
some fish species, like the
angler fish
or other deep-sea fish, have been spotted in these waters.
If
Mount
Everest
, the highest mountain on Earth at , was set in the
deepest part of the Mariana Trench, there would be of water left
above it.
Measurement and study
The trench was first sounded during the
Challenger expedition
(December 1872 – May 1876), which recorded a depth of 9,636 m
(31,614 feet).
Challenger II
surveyed the trench using
echo
sounding, a much more precise and vastly easier way to measure
depth than the sounding equipment and drag lines used in the
original expedition.
During this survey, the deepest part of the
trench was recorded when the Challenger II measured a
depth of 5,960 fathoms (10,900 metres,
35,760 ft) at , known as the Challenger Deep
.
In 1957,
the Soviet
vessel
Vityaz reported a depth of
11,034 meters (36,200 ft), dubbed the Mariana
Hollow. (Although this claim was made by the Soviets in
1957, the finding has not been repeated by subsequent mapping
expeditions using more accurate and modern equipment.)
In 1962, the surface ship M.V.
Spencer F. Baird
recorded a maximum depth of 10,915 meters (35,840 ft), using
precision depth gauges.
In 1984, the
Japanese sent the
Takuyō (拓洋), a highly specialized survey vessel, to the
Mariana Trench and collected data using a narrow, multi-beam echo
sounder; they reported a maximum depth of 10,924 meters, also
reported as 10,920 meters ± 10 meters.
The most accurate measurement on record was taken by a Japanese
probe,
Kaikō (かいこう), which descended
unmanned to the bottom of the trench on March 24, 1995 and recorded
a depth of 10,911 meters (35,798 ft).
In 2003, a spot was found along the Mariana Trench, the depth of
which is around the same depth as the Challenger Deep, possibly
even deeper.
It was discovered while scientists from the
Hawaii Institute of Geophysics and
Planetology were completing a survey around Guam
; they used a
sonar mapping system towed behind the research ship to conduct the
survey. This new spot was named the HMRG Deep
, after the group of scientists who discovered
it.
Descents
The
Swiss-designed, Italian-built, United
States Navy bathyscaphe Trieste
reached the bottom at 1:06 p.m. on January 23,
1960, with U.S. Navy Lieutenant
Don
Walsh and
Jacques Piccard on
board.
Iron shot was used for
ballast, with
gasoline for
buoyancy. The
onboard systems indicated a depth of 11,521 meters
(37,799 ft), but this was later revised to 10,924
meters(35,840 ft). At the bottom, Walsh and Piccard were
surprised to discover
soles or
flounder about 30 cm (1 ft) long,
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA) webpage. Section "1960 - Man at the Deepest Depth" as
well as
shrimp. According to Piccard, "The
bottom appeared light and clear, a waste of firm
diatomaceous ooze".
The
Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution
sent its Nereus hybrid remotely
operated vehicle (HROV) to explore the trench on May 31,
2009.
See also
Notes
External links