https://neal.fun/deep-sea/ Neal.fun The Deep Sea Made with love by Neal Agarwal Image of a Manatee Manatee Image of a Bottlenose Dolphin Dive Bottlenose Dolphin Dive Image of a Green Sea Turtle Green Sea Turtle Image of a Beluga Whale Beluga Whale Image of a Sea Lion Sea Lion Image of a Velvet Crab Velvet Crab Image of a Staghorn Coral Staghorn Coral Image of a Killer Whale Killer Whale Image of a Barramundi Barramundi Image of a Great Barracuda Great Barracuda Image of a Spotted Bass Spotted Bass Image of a Striped Bass Striped Bass Image of a Black Drum Black Drum Image of a Blue Fish Blue Fish Image of a Spiny dogfish Spiny dogfish Image of a Dentex Dentex Image of a Mahi-mahi Mahi-mahi Image of a Flounder Flounder Image of a Bull Shark Bull Shark Image of a Great White Shark Great White Shark Image of a Blue Shark Blue Shark Image of a Gummy Shark Gummy Shark Image of a Mako Shark Mako Shark Image of a Sunfish Sunfish Image of a Human Human Image of a Atlantic Mackerel Atlantic Mackerel Image of a Queen Snapper Queen Snapper Image of a Pelagic Stingray Pelagic Stingray Image of a Deepest dive of a Narwhal Deepest dive of a Narwhal Image of a Frilled Shark Frilled Shark Image of a Viperfish Viperfish Image of a Anglerfish Anglerfish Image of a Leatherback Sea Turtle Leatherback Sea Turtle Image of a Olive Ridly Sea Turtle Olive Ridly Sea Turtle Image of a Sea Pen Sea Pen Image of a Dragonfish Dragonfish Image of a Orange Roughy Orange Roughy Image of a Wolf Eel Wolf Eel Image of a Swordfish Swordfish Image of a Chain Catshark Chain Catshark Image of a Atlantic Cod Atlantic Cod Image of a Pacific Cod Pacific Cod Image of a European pilchard European pilchard Image of a Atlantic Salmon Atlantic Salmon Image of a Chinook Salmon Chinook Salmon Image of a Blue Tang Blue Tang Image of a Clown Fish Clown Fish Image of a Haddock Haddock Image of a Vampire Squid Vampire Squid Image of a Japanese Spider Crab Japanese Spider Crab Image of a Firefly Squid Firefly Squid Image of a Sperm Whale Dive Sperm Whale Dive Image of a Yeti Crab Yeti Crab Image of a Big Red Jellyfish Big Red Jellyfish Image of a Jewel Squid Jewel Squid Image of a Cockatoo Squid Cockatoo Squid Image of a Phronima Phronima Image of a Bubblegum Coral Bubblegum Coral Image of a Giant Isopod Giant Isopod Image of a Coelacanth Coelacanth Image of a Colossal Squid Colossal Squid Image of a Goblin Shark Goblin Shark Image of a Chimaeras Chimaeras Image of a Black Swallower Black Swallower Image of a Monkfish Monkfish Image of a Giant Pacific Octopus Giant Pacific Octopus Image of a Sixgill Shark Sixgill Shark Image of a Emperor Penguin Dive Emperor Penguin Dive Image of a Elephant Seal Dive Elephant Seal Dive Image of a Baird's Beaked Whale Baird's Beaked Whale Image of a Leptoseris Leptoseris Image of a Gigantactis Gigantactis Image of a Bigeye Tuna Bigeye Tuna Image of a Bamboo Coral Bamboo Coral Image of a Nautilus Nautilus Image of a Hatchetfish Hatchetfish Image of a Giant Oarfish Giant Oarfish Image of a Giant Tube Worm Giant Tube Worm Image of a Telescope Octopus Telescope Octopus Image of a Barreleye Fish Barreleye Fish Image of a Squidworm Squidworm Image of a Sea Angel Sea Angel Image of a Marrus orthocanna Marrus orthocanna Image of a Scaly-foot Snail Scaly-foot Snail Image of a Vigtorniella Worm Vigtorniella Worm Image of a Terrible Claw Lobster Terrible Claw Lobster Image of a Venus Flytrap Sea Anemone Venus Flytrap Sea Anemone Image of a Leafy Sea Dragon Leafy Sea Dragon Image of a Headless Chicken Fish Headless Chicken Fish Image of a Greenland Halibut Greenland Halibut Image of a King Crab King Crab Image of a Greenland Shark Greenland Shark Image of a Blobfish Blobfish Image of a Zombie Worm Zombie Worm Image of a Polar Bear Polar Bear Image of a Kelp Kelp Image of a Thick-Billed Murre Dive Thick-Billed Murre Dive Image of a Barnacle Barnacle At 332 meters, this is the deepest any human has ever scuba dived. Set by Ahmed Gabr in 2014. No sunlight is able to reach this deep. Many deep-sea creatures cope by creating light themselves - also known as bioluminescence. Narwhals dive to this depth up to 15 times a day in search for food. The Japanese Spider Crab is the largest known crab with a maximum leg span of 3.8m. Coelacanths were thought to be extinct until found alive in 1938. Leatherback Sea Turtles are the oldest sea turtle species. Giant Oarfish can grow up to 11m long. Sixgill Sharks spend the day in deep waters and the night in shallow waters. They can be found all over the world. Telescope Octopus are almost completely transparent and have unique protruding eyes. Barreleye Fish have a transparent head that allows their eyes to collect more light. Black Swallowers can swallow entire fish whole - even those vastly larger than themselves! Vampire Squids eat marine snow - organic material that falls from shallower waters. Headless Chicken Fish are sea cucumbers with wing-like fins that allow them to swim. Colossal Squid are the largest known squid species. They can reach a length of 10 meters and weigh up to 700 kg. The Orange Roughy can live up to 200 years. Deep sea life often have elongated life spans. Meals are rare in the deep sea. Deep sea creatures have adapted to this - one Giant Isopod in captivity went five years without eating. Many deep sea species use the color red as camouflage since it's the first color to leave the spectrum as you dive deeper. Goblin Sharks are known as "living fossils" because they're the only living species of a lineage that has existed for 125 million years. Is it a squid, or a worm? It's a worm. Sea Angels are majestic sea slugs that use wings to propel themselves. The Scaly-Foot Snail gets its name from the iron plates on its foot and the iron shell it makes out of Iron Sulphide. Anglerfish have a large bioluminescent lure used to attract prey in the darkness. Giant Tube Worms get their nutrients from hydrothermal vents. Hydrothermal vents are formed from seawater passing through extremely hot volcanic rocks. They release heavy metals that are toxic to most animals. But even in those extreme conditions specialized life finds a way to survive. Yeti Crabs live on hydrothermal vents. The Midnight Zone The Twilight Zone Image of a Gulper Eel Gulper Eel Image of a Amphipoda Amphipoda Image of a Patagonian Toothfish Patagonian Toothfish Image of a Flabby Whalefish Flabby Whalefish Image of a Atolla Jellyfish Atolla Jellyfish Image of a Fangtooth Fangtooth Image of a Titanic Wreckage Titanic Wreckage Image of a Caridea Caridea Image of a Cuvier's Beaked Whale Dive Cuvier's Beaked Whale Dive Image of a Lizardfish Lizardfish Image of a Harp Sponge Harp Sponge Image of a Dumbo Octopus Dumbo Octopus Image of a Cosmic Jellyfish Cosmic Jellyfish Image of a Brittle Star Brittle Star Image of a Sea Pig Sea Pig Image of a Megamouth Shark Megamouth Shark Image of a Stoplight Loosejaw Stoplight Loosejaw Image of a Tripod Fish Tripod Fish Image of a Faceless Fish Faceless Fish Image of a Cookiecutter Shark Cookiecutter Shark Image of a Glass Sponge Glass Sponge Image of a Abyssal Spiderfish Abyssal Spiderfish This is the average depth of the ocean. But in some places it goes deeper. Much deeper. Cuvier's Beaked Whales are the deepest diving mammals. On April 14th, 1912 the Titanic sank to its final resting place at a depth of 3,800 meters. This is the deepest point of the Manila Trench in the South China Sea. Patagonian Toothfish have antifreeze proteins in its tissues to prevent freezing in sub zero temperatures. Megamouth sharks are one of the largest growing shark species with some reaching 7 meters long. The temperature here is near freezing and very few animals can survive the extreme pressure. This shark takes cookie-shaped chunks out of its prey. The Abyssal Zone Image of a Comb Jelly Comb Jelly Image of a Hadal Snailfish Hadal Snailfish Image of a USS Johnston Shipwreck USS Johnston Shipwreck Image of a Grenadier Grenadier Image of a Cusk Eel Cusk Eel Image of a Chiton Chiton You have scrolled the height of Mount Everest. Comb Jellies have been around for 500 million years. Despite looking like jellyfish, they are not closely related. This is the lowest point of the Puerto Rico Trench. This is the deepest point of the Java Trench in the Indian Ocean. The USS Johnston sank in WWII and is the deepest shipwreck ever found. More people have been to the Moon than the Hadal Zone. Most of the Hadal Zone takes place in deep sea trenches. Deep sea trenches form by a process called "subduction" where the Earth's tectonic plates meet and push together. The deep sea can be a lonely place. Life here is sparse - the extreme conditions make survival difficult. But still not impossible. So little is known about life in these deep environments. Almost every expedition uncovers something new. The Hadal Zone Image of a Hadal Amphipod Hadal Amphipod Many probes and submarines have been lost trying to reach the deepest parts of the ocean. On January 23rd, 1960, about 9 years before the moon landing, humans went where they never had before. Two men, Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh, onboard the submarine Trieste slowly descended into the Mariana Trench. Their goal was to reach The Challenger Deep - the deepest point in the ocean. The submarine used a re-breather system that would later be used in spacecraft. There was barely enough space inside the pressure sphere for both of them. The immense pressure of the deep sea means any mistake would mean certain death. During the descent, one of the window panes cracked and shook the entire vessel. Nevertheless, they continued. Even at these unfathomable depths, Jacques and Don could still see life out the window. Life can survive unimaginable environments. After 4 hours and 47 minutes of anxiety and claustrophobia... They succeeded and became the first humans to reach the deepest point in the ocean. The Challenger Deep Submarine Trieste 0 METERS DEEP The ocean bottom The Deep Sea Made with love by Neal Agarwal Special thanks to Dr. Harri Pettitt-Wade for help with editing and feedback. Coffee imageBuy me a coffee! Explore more posts on Neal.fun