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Create your page here Fullscreen player Tweet this page share on Facebook Thursday, 19 September 2024 * News * Podcasts * Videos * Video Details * Wiki * Images * Editors * remove the playlist Seabed Exploration * remove the playlist Seabed Exploration * Exploration * Mineral exploration * Exploration (video game) EXPLORATION Exploration is the act of searching for the purpose of discovery of information or resources. Exploration occurs in all non-sessile animal species, including humans. In human history, its most dramatic rise was during the Age of Discovery when European explorers sailed and charted much of the rest of the world for a variety of reasons. Since then, major explorations after the Age of Discovery have occurred for reasons mostly aimed at information discovery. In scientific research, exploration is one of three purposes of empirical research (the other two being description and explanation). The term is commonly used metaphorically. For example, an individual may speak of exploring the Internet, sexuality, etc. NOTABLE PERIODS OF HUMAN EXPLORATION PHOENICIAN GALLEY SAILINGS The Phoenicians (1550 BCE–300 BCE) traded throughout the Mediterranean Sea and Asia Minor though many of their routes are still unknown today. The presence of tin in some Phoenician artifacts suggests that they may have traveled to Britain. Some scientists speculate that they voyaged all the way to Central America, although this is disputed. According to Virgil's Aeneid and other ancient sources, the legendary Queen Dido was a Phoenician from Asia Minor who sailed to North Africa and founded the city of Carthage. Read more This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - https://wn.com/Exploration MINERAL EXPLORATION Mineral exploration is the process of finding ores (commercially viable concentrations of minerals) to mine. Mineral exploration is a much more intensive, organized and professional form of mineral prospecting and, though it frequently uses the services of prospecting, the process of mineral exploration on the whole is much more involved. SEE ALSO Aeromagnetic survey Geology Mineral resource classification Mineral industry Mining Ore genesis Exploration logging Drilling rig Prospecting Prospectivity Mapping REFERENCES Read more This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - https://wn.com/Mineral_exploration EXPLORATION (VIDEO GAME) Exploration (also known as Voyages of Discovery and Christoph Kolumbus in Germany) is a simulation strategy game designed by Software 2000 in 1994. Read more This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - https://wn.com/Exploration_(video_game) PODCASTS: Email this Page Play all in Full Screen Show More Related Videos developed with YouTube Email this Page Play all in Full Screen Show More Related Videos * VISUALIZING DEEP-SEA MINING This animation demonstrates how a collector vehicle launched from a ship during deep-sea mining would travel 15,000 feet below sea level to collect polymetallic nodules containing essential minerals. Narrated by MIT Professor Thomas Peacock. For more information, please watch: https://youtu.be/MWvCtF1itQM published: 10 Dec 2019 * THE RACE TO MINE THE BOTTOM OF THE OCEAN We have a lot to gain — and a lot to lose — from deep-sea mining. Help keep Vox free for everybody: http://www.vox.com/give-now Subscribe to our channel and turn on notifications (🔔) so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO There are metallic deposits scattered throughout our ocean floors — among hydrothermal vents, under the crust of seamounts, and scattered along sea plains in the form of rocks. As it happens, in our search for climate solutions, these metals have become more critical than ever to help us transition away from fossil fuels. We need them for everything like electric car batteries, copper wiring for electrification and wind turbines. Our land-based deposits have met our needs so far, but it’s unclear whether they will continue to, or whether we’ll want to kee... published: 11 Oct 2023 * GET MORE JELLYFISH, FLASHLIGHTS & KEGS FROM AUTUMN SEABED EXPLORATION EVENT - SURVIVOR.IO GUIDE #Survivorio #Autumn #seabed #Exploration #event #jellyfish #Kegs #flashlight 0:00 - Intro 0:25 - GET CLAN REWARDS! 2:15 - HOW MANY CHESTS TO OPEN? 2:54 - SPEND GEMS OR NOT? 3:31 - GET MOST REWARDS! 3:39 - HOW IT WORKS? FLASHLIGHT, KEG, SEAWEED... SUPPORT MY CHANNEL ON: PAYPAL: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=ZGS42SCX7FCQW JOIN MEMBERSHIP: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDcNY27ca35ClqQ09LrxrXQ/join SUBSCRIBE PlayMe SHORTS: https://youtube.com/channel/UC2UVm0Gzd-WY4dggNSZ29hQ JOIN MY DISCORD⬇️ https://discord.gg/3sDVdSjX JOIN Ultimate Survivors for more useful Lists⬇️ https://discord.gg/ultimatesurvivors Official SURVIVORio Discord⬇️ https://discord.gg/survivorio published: 27 Sep 2023 * DIVING BELL BOAT: WALKING DOWN TO THE RHINE'S RIVERBED The diving bell boat "Carl Straat" patrols the stretch between Alsace and the Netherlands. Captain Thomas Bach keeps the riverbed clean. His ship features a steel diving bell that can be lowered, using overpressure to displace the water at the bottom of the Rhine. He can then stay dry while working below the water; retrieving lost anchors, for example. For the crew, it is a seven-meter descent via the shaft pipe to the bottom of the Rhine. There they have to work in very harsh conditions, from compressed air to extreme heat in summer and cold in winter. Excerpt from the documentary series "The Rhine From Above". Click here to watch all episodes: http://bit.ly/RhineFromAbove © 2014, Licensed by vidicom published: 02 Sep 2021 * MARIANA TRENCH | IN PURSUIT OF THE ABYSS The depths of the Mariana Trench conceal many peculiar creatures. This deep sea film is sponsored by NordVPN. Go to https://nordvpn.com/naturalworldfacts or use code naturalworldfacts to get a 2-year plan plus a bonus gift with a huge discount. Check out the NordVPN YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCWNR... The Mariana Trench sits like a crescent-shaped dent in the floor of the Pacific. A 2,550 km long, 69 km wide fracture that plummets down into a pure black void of the Hadal Zone. At the bottom, it hosts the deepest known location on Earth. The Challenger Deep, 11,033 metres or 36,200 feet beneath the waves. The trench itself is but one part of a global network of deep scars that cut across the ocean floor. Features that formed from a process called subduction. In... published: 22 Jun 2021 * EXPLORING LIFE ON THE DEEP SEA FLOOR Deep sea life must choose whether to live on the bottom, or to brave the expansive open ocean of the midwater zone. Creatures that adapt to life in the midwater zone are known as pelagic, while creatures that evolve to be well-suited to an existence on or near the sea floor, are known as benthic or demersal. These two groups could not be more different, but which is a more effective way of life? First, let’s take a look at the demersal creatures of the deep - the bottom-feeders, clinging to rocky seamounts, and burrowing into the mud. We will begin our investigation in the shallows, and follow the ever-deepening sea-floor down to the far depths of the deep ocean. The diversity of organisms that are adapted to life near the bottom of the deep sea is immense - and far greater than that of p... published: 16 Feb 2021 * THE DEEPEST DIVE IN ANTARCTICA REVEALS A SEA FLOOR TEEMING WITH LIFE http://www.oceanx.org http://www.instagram.com/oceanx http://www.facebook.com/oceanxorg http://www.twitter.com/oceanx No one really knows what’s in the deep ocean in Antarctica. Now we have the technology to reach into the ocean depths, we accompanied scientist and deep-sea explorer Jon Copley and became the first to descend to 1000 meters underwater in Antarctica for Blue Planet II. The exotic creatures we found there will astonish you. This video is a part of Our Blue Planet, a joint venture between OceanX and BBC Earth to get people talking about the ocean. Join the conversation on Twitter: @OurBluePlanet. #oceanx #alucia #antarctica #submarines Director: Mark Dalio Director of Photography (AP): Janssen Powers Director of Photography (BBC): Ted Giffords 2nd Camera/Drone Op: James D... published: 16 Mar 2018 * THE MOST HORRIFYING PLACES IN THE OCEAN 11,034 M BELOW SEA LEVEL Subscribe to my channel - http://bit.ly/ReYOUniverse The world's oceans are so underexplored that if you dive deeper than 3,500 meters, there's a good chance to discover a new species unknown to science. There's also a good chance you'll find debris and garbage. Oceans cover more than 70% of the Earth's surface. The average depth of the oceans is about 3.7 kilometers, and since light can only penetrate to a depth of 100 meters, darkness reigns deeper underwater. Let’s push this statement one step further and conclude that since most of the planet is covered by water, it means that most of the Earth exists in total darkness. Water in the oceans account for almost 96% of the Earth's water. The portion of fresh water compared to seawater is so small that if the fresh water that flows into th... published: 19 Jun 2022 * BOATY MCBOATFACE SUBMARINE COMPLETES TWO MONTHS EXPLORATION (GLOBAL SEAS) 9/AUG/2024 Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration. #submarine #BoatyMcBoatface There are earlier reports on this ship (name, etc.) on this channel here: https://youtu.be/yVI6yDeq_MQ published: 09 Aug 2024 * THE DEEP OCEAN IS THE FINAL FRONTIER ON PLANET EARTH Watch the latest in the Ocean series - How to stop plastics getting into the ocean: https://youtu.be/D7EdgCxFZ8Q The ocean covers 70% of our planet. The deep-sea floor is a realm that is largely unexplored, but cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to go deeper than ever before. Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http://econ.trib.al/rWl91R7 Beneath the waves is a mysterious world that takes up to 95% of Earth's living space. Only three people have ever reached the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean. The deep is a world without sunlight, of freezing temperatures, and immense pressure. It's remained largely unexplored until now. Cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to explore deeper than ever before. They ar... published: 23 Mar 2017 PreviousNext developed with YouTube 2:19 VISUALIZING DEEP-SEA MINING * Order: Reorder * Duration: 2:19 * Uploaded Date: 10 Dec 2019 * views: 164205 This animation demonstrates how a collector vehicle launched from a ship during deep-sea mining would travel 15,000 feet below sea level to collect polymetallic... This animation demonstrates how a collector vehicle launched from a ship during deep-sea mining would travel 15,000 feet below sea level to collect polymetallic nodules containing essential minerals. Narrated by MIT Professor Thomas Peacock. For more information, please watch: https://youtu.be/MWvCtF1itQM https://wn.com/Visualizing_Deep_Sea_Mining This animation demonstrates how a collector vehicle launched from a ship during deep-sea mining would travel 15,000 feet below sea level to collect polymetallic nodules containing essential minerals. Narrated by MIT Professor Thomas Peacock. For more information, please watch: https://youtu.be/MWvCtF1itQM * published: 10 Dec 2019 * views: 164205 11:13 THE RACE TO MINE THE BOTTOM OF THE OCEAN * Order: Reorder * Duration: 11:13 * Uploaded Date: 11 Oct 2023 * views: 2730518 We have a lot to gain — and a lot to lose — from deep-sea mining. Help keep Vox free for everybody: http://www.vox.com/give-now Subscribe to our channel and ... We have a lot to gain — and a lot to lose — from deep-sea mining. Help keep Vox free for everybody: http://www.vox.com/give-now Subscribe to our channel and turn on notifications (🔔) so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO There are metallic deposits scattered throughout our ocean floors — among hydrothermal vents, under the crust of seamounts, and scattered along sea plains in the form of rocks. As it happens, in our search for climate solutions, these metals have become more critical than ever to help us transition away from fossil fuels. We need them for everything like electric car batteries, copper wiring for electrification and wind turbines. Our land-based deposits have met our needs so far, but it’s unclear whether they will continue to, or whether we’ll want to keep destroying the environment to do so. This video explains the history and the debate over mining metals in the deep sea and why one Canadian company, The Metals Company, is leading the rush there. There are huge environmental implications for digging up seafloor ecosystems as well as ethical ones: Metal-rich zones like the Clarion-Clipperton Zone lie in international waters that technically belong to everyone. A United Nations body located in Kingston, Jamaica, the International Seabed Authority, is faced with an urgent dilemma over how to regulate mining, whether the environmental harm is worth the benefits to solving our climate crisis, and how to fairly share the profits from this shared resource. Correction: at 7:45, the company rang the opening bell at Nasdaq not New York Stock Exchange. You can dig into the exploration contracts issued by the International Seabed Authority here: https://www.isa.org.jm/exploration-contracts/ The New York Times has done some important investigative work on deep sea mining: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/29/world/deep-sea-mining.html This study provides a thorough overview of some of the ecosystems with metallic deposits: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2017.00418/full Here is more information about DeepCCZ, which is leading research on the ecosystem of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone: https://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/18ccz/welcome.html Note: In a previous version of this video, the voice-over incorrectly stated miles instead of meters at 0:15. It has since been corrected. Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/give-now Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: https://www.vox.com/ Listen to our podcasts: https://www.vox.com/podcasts https://wn.com/The_Race_To_Mine_The_Bottom_Of_The_Ocean We have a lot to gain — and a lot to lose — from deep-sea mining. Help keep Vox free for everybody: http://www.vox.com/give-now Subscribe to our channel and turn on notifications (🔔) so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO There are metallic deposits scattered throughout our ocean floors — among hydrothermal vents, under the crust of seamounts, and scattered along sea plains in the form of rocks. As it happens, in our search for climate solutions, these metals have become more critical than ever to help us transition away from fossil fuels. We need them for everything like electric car batteries, copper wiring for electrification and wind turbines. Our land-based deposits have met our needs so far, but it’s unclear whether they will continue to, or whether we’ll want to keep destroying the environment to do so. This video explains the history and the debate over mining metals in the deep sea and why one Canadian company, The Metals Company, is leading the rush there. There are huge environmental implications for digging up seafloor ecosystems as well as ethical ones: Metal-rich zones like the Clarion-Clipperton Zone lie in international waters that technically belong to everyone. A United Nations body located in Kingston, Jamaica, the International Seabed Authority, is faced with an urgent dilemma over how to regulate mining, whether the environmental harm is worth the benefits to solving our climate crisis, and how to fairly share the profits from this shared resource. Correction: at 7:45, the company rang the opening bell at Nasdaq not New York Stock Exchange. You can dig into the exploration contracts issued by the International Seabed Authority here: https://www.isa.org.jm/exploration-contracts/ The New York Times has done some important investigative work on deep sea mining: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/29/world/deep-sea-mining.html This study provides a thorough overview of some of the ecosystems with metallic deposits: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2017.00418/full Here is more information about DeepCCZ, which is leading research on the ecosystem of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone: https://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/18ccz/welcome.html Note: In a previous version of this video, the voice-over incorrectly stated miles instead of meters at 0:15. It has since been corrected. Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/give-now Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: https://www.vox.com/ Listen to our podcasts: https://www.vox.com/podcasts * published: 11 Oct 2023 * views: 2730518 5:10 GET MORE JELLYFISH, FLASHLIGHTS & KEGS FROM AUTUMN SEABED EXPLORATION EVENT - SURVIVOR.IO GUIDE * Order: Reorder * Duration: 5:10 * Uploaded Date: 27 Sep 2023 * views: 4366 #Survivorio #Autumn #seabed #Exploration #event #jellyfish #Kegs #flashlight 0:00 - Intro 0:25 - GET CLAN REWARDS! 2:15 - HOW MANY CHESTS TO OPEN? 2:54 - SPE... #Survivorio #Autumn #seabed #Exploration #event #jellyfish #Kegs #flashlight 0:00 - Intro 0:25 - GET CLAN REWARDS! 2:15 - HOW MANY CHESTS TO OPEN? 2:54 - SPEND GEMS OR NOT? 3:31 - GET MOST REWARDS! 3:39 - HOW IT WORKS? FLASHLIGHT, KEG, SEAWEED... SUPPORT MY CHANNEL ON: PAYPAL: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=ZGS42SCX7FCQW JOIN MEMBERSHIP: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDcNY27ca35ClqQ09LrxrXQ/join SUBSCRIBE PlayMe SHORTS: https://youtube.com/channel/UC2UVm0Gzd-WY4dggNSZ29hQ JOIN MY DISCORD⬇️ https://discord.gg/3sDVdSjX JOIN Ultimate Survivors for more useful Lists⬇️ https://discord.gg/ultimatesurvivors Official SURVIVORio Discord⬇️ https://discord.gg/survivorio https://wn.com/Get_More_Jellyfish,_Flashlights_Kegs_From_Autumn_Seabed_Exploration_Event_Survivor.Io_Guide #Survivorio #Autumn #seabed #Exploration #event #jellyfish #Kegs #flashlight 0:00 - Intro 0:25 - GET CLAN REWARDS! 2:15 - HOW MANY CHESTS TO OPEN? 2:54 - SPEND GEMS OR NOT? 3:31 - GET MOST REWARDS! 3:39 - HOW IT WORKS? FLASHLIGHT, KEG, SEAWEED... SUPPORT MY CHANNEL ON: PAYPAL: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=ZGS42SCX7FCQW JOIN MEMBERSHIP: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDcNY27ca35ClqQ09LrxrXQ/join SUBSCRIBE PlayMe SHORTS: https://youtube.com/channel/UC2UVm0Gzd-WY4dggNSZ29hQ JOIN MY DISCORD⬇️ https://discord.gg/3sDVdSjX JOIN Ultimate Survivors for more useful Lists⬇️ https://discord.gg/ultimatesurvivors Official SURVIVORio Discord⬇️ https://discord.gg/survivorio * published: 27 Sep 2023 * views: 4366 6:11 DIVING BELL BOAT: WALKING DOWN TO THE RHINE'S RIVERBED * Order: Reorder * Duration: 6:11 * Uploaded Date: 02 Sep 2021 * views: 540440 The diving bell boat "Carl Straat" patrols the stretch between Alsace and the Netherlands. Captain Thomas Bach keeps the riverbed clean. His ship features a ste... The diving bell boat "Carl Straat" patrols the stretch between Alsace and the Netherlands. Captain Thomas Bach keeps the riverbed clean. His ship features a steel diving bell that can be lowered, using overpressure to displace the water at the bottom of the Rhine. He can then stay dry while working below the water; retrieving lost anchors, for example. For the crew, it is a seven-meter descent via the shaft pipe to the bottom of the Rhine. There they have to work in very harsh conditions, from compressed air to extreme heat in summer and cold in winter. Excerpt from the documentary series "The Rhine From Above". Click here to watch all episodes: http://bit.ly/RhineFromAbove © 2014, Licensed by vidicom https://wn.com/Diving_Bell_Boat_Walking_Down_To_The_Rhine's_Riverbed The diving bell boat "Carl Straat" patrols the stretch between Alsace and the Netherlands. Captain Thomas Bach keeps the riverbed clean. His ship features a steel diving bell that can be lowered, using overpressure to displace the water at the bottom of the Rhine. He can then stay dry while working below the water; retrieving lost anchors, for example. For the crew, it is a seven-meter descent via the shaft pipe to the bottom of the Rhine. There they have to work in very harsh conditions, from compressed air to extreme heat in summer and cold in winter. Excerpt from the documentary series "The Rhine From Above". Click here to watch all episodes: http://bit.ly/RhineFromAbove © 2014, Licensed by vidicom * published: 02 Sep 2021 * views: 540440 13:34 MARIANA TRENCH | IN PURSUIT OF THE ABYSS * Order: Reorder * Duration: 13:34 * Uploaded Date: 22 Jun 2021 * views: 20310552 The depths of the Mariana Trench conceal many peculiar creatures. This deep sea film is sponsored by NordVPN. Go to https://nordvpn.com/naturalworldfacts or use... The depths of the Mariana Trench conceal many peculiar creatures. This deep sea film is sponsored by NordVPN. Go to https://nordvpn.com/naturalworldfacts or use code naturalworldfacts to get a 2-year plan plus a bonus gift with a huge discount. Check out the NordVPN YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCWNR... The Mariana Trench sits like a crescent-shaped dent in the floor of the Pacific. A 2,550 km long, 69 km wide fracture that plummets down into a pure black void of the Hadal Zone. At the bottom, it hosts the deepest known location on Earth. The Challenger Deep, 11,033 metres or 36,200 feet beneath the waves. The trench itself is but one part of a global network of deep scars that cut across the ocean floor. Features that formed from a process called subduction. In the case of the Mariana Trench, the western edge of the Pacific Plate was thrust beneath the smaller Mariana Plate to the west, creating the deep fracture. Molten material then rose through volcanoes near the trench, building the nearby Mariana Islands. 00:00 - Introduction 01:18 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - How the Trench Formed 02:41 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - An 'Impossible' Frontier 03:40 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - The HMS Challenger 04:11 - Chapter 2: In Pursuit of the Abyss - The Bathyscape Trieste, 1960 05:51 - Chapter 2: In Pursuit of the Abyss - The Deepsea Challenge, 2012 06:38 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Kaiko Mission 07:56 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Hadal Amphipod 09:00 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - Abyssal Sea Cucumbers 09:45 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Mariana Snailfish 10:17 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - Denizens of the Abyss 11:05 - Conclusion CHECK OUT OUR DEEP SEA WEBSITE: https://naturalworldfacts.com/deep-se... I do not own any of the footage. I write the script, narrate, and edit what footage I can find, which is allowed due to YouTube's 'Fair Use' policy. Footage used is from various YouTube sources, MBARI, NatGeo, the Ocean Exploration Institute and the Schmidt Ocean Institute, as well as other sources. Music Used: Blue Danube by Strauss Bach Cello Suite No. 1, G Major, Predule, performed by Cooper Cannell Always (Hebridean Mix) by Jessica Curry This Godforsaken Aerial by Jessica Curry Ode to Joy performed by Cooper Cannell #deepsea #wildlife #nature #documentary #ocean #marinebiology #science #biology Resources: http://awesomeocean.com/top-stories/8... http://www.deepseachallenge.com/the-e... https://wn.com/Mariana_Trench_|_In_Pursuit_Of_The_Abyss The depths of the Mariana Trench conceal many peculiar creatures. This deep sea film is sponsored by NordVPN. Go to https://nordvpn.com/naturalworldfacts or use code naturalworldfacts to get a 2-year plan plus a bonus gift with a huge discount. Check out the NordVPN YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCWNR... The Mariana Trench sits like a crescent-shaped dent in the floor of the Pacific. A 2,550 km long, 69 km wide fracture that plummets down into a pure black void of the Hadal Zone. At the bottom, it hosts the deepest known location on Earth. The Challenger Deep, 11,033 metres or 36,200 feet beneath the waves. The trench itself is but one part of a global network of deep scars that cut across the ocean floor. Features that formed from a process called subduction. In the case of the Mariana Trench, the western edge of the Pacific Plate was thrust beneath the smaller Mariana Plate to the west, creating the deep fracture. Molten material then rose through volcanoes near the trench, building the nearby Mariana Islands. 00:00 - Introduction 01:18 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - How the Trench Formed 02:41 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - An 'Impossible' Frontier 03:40 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - The HMS Challenger 04:11 - Chapter 2: In Pursuit of the Abyss - The Bathyscape Trieste, 1960 05:51 - Chapter 2: In Pursuit of the Abyss - The Deepsea Challenge, 2012 06:38 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Kaiko Mission 07:56 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Hadal Amphipod 09:00 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - Abyssal Sea Cucumbers 09:45 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Mariana Snailfish 10:17 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - Denizens of the Abyss 11:05 - Conclusion CHECK OUT OUR DEEP SEA WEBSITE: https://naturalworldfacts.com/deep-se... I do not own any of the footage. I write the script, narrate, and edit what footage I can find, which is allowed due to YouTube's 'Fair Use' policy. Footage used is from various YouTube sources, MBARI, NatGeo, the Ocean Exploration Institute and the Schmidt Ocean Institute, as well as other sources. Music Used: Blue Danube by Strauss Bach Cello Suite No. 1, G Major, Predule, performed by Cooper Cannell Always (Hebridean Mix) by Jessica Curry This Godforsaken Aerial by Jessica Curry Ode to Joy performed by Cooper Cannell #deepsea #wildlife #nature #documentary #ocean #marinebiology #science #biology Resources: http://awesomeocean.com/top-stories/8... http://www.deepseachallenge.com/the-e... * published: 22 Jun 2021 * views: 20310552 11:14 EXPLORING LIFE ON THE DEEP SEA FLOOR * Order: Reorder * Duration: 11:14 * Uploaded Date: 16 Feb 2021 * views: 303149 Deep sea life must choose whether to live on the bottom, or to brave the expansive open ocean of the midwater zone. Creatures that adapt to life in the midwater... Deep sea life must choose whether to live on the bottom, or to brave the expansive open ocean of the midwater zone. Creatures that adapt to life in the midwater zone are known as pelagic, while creatures that evolve to be well-suited to an existence on or near the sea floor, are known as benthic or demersal. These two groups could not be more different, but which is a more effective way of life? First, let’s take a look at the demersal creatures of the deep - the bottom-feeders, clinging to rocky seamounts, and burrowing into the mud. We will begin our investigation in the shallows, and follow the ever-deepening sea-floor down to the far depths of the deep ocean. The diversity of organisms that are adapted to life near the bottom of the deep sea is immense - and far greater than that of pelagic organisms. Life thrives on every part of the ocean floor, from near-shore ecosystems, all the way to the abyss. But the deeper you go, the stranger they become. Part 2 | Pelagic Deep Sea Life: https://youtu.be/FqHSZ23x1LE DEEP SEA HUB: https://naturalworldfacts.com/deep-sea-hub 00:00 - Introduction: Pelagic and Demersal Life 00:55 - Part 1: Demersal Creatures of the Deep 01:10 - The Diversity of Benthic Life 01:43 - The Life of Coral Reefs 02:15 - Life at the Continental Shelf 02:29 - Cold-water Coral and Sponge Gardens 03:07 - Life on the Abyssal Plain 03:29 - Advantages of Living on the Sea Floor 03:48 - The Sea-Floor Nutrient Cycle 04:09 - Why Benthic Life is so Abundant 04:45 - The Extent of the Abyssal Plain 05:00 - Deep Sea Infauna and Epifauna 05:26 - The Role of Benthic Life in the Ecosystem 05:53 - Ancient Crinoids of the Deep Sea 06:32 - Benthic Fish of the Deep Sea 07:07 - Limitations of Life on the Sea Floor 07:25 - Seamounts Explained 07:49 - Why Seamounts are Biological Hotspots 08:05 - Life at Cold-Water Reefs 08:31 - Life at Deep Sea Brine Pools 09:04 - Life at Hydrothermal Vents 09:31 - Life at the Bottom of the Mariana Trench 09:53 - The Mariana Snailfish 10:08 - Conclusion: Living on the Sea-floor is an Advantage 10:46 - The Deep Sea Hub Footage used belongs to Schmidt Ocean Institute, MBARI, OceanX and the Ocean Exploration Institute. #deepsea #wildlife #nature #documentary #ocean #marinebiology #science #biology Music Used: Away - Patrick Patrikios Feels - Patrick Patrikios Simple - Patrick Patrikios Prism - Bobby Richards Strange the Dreamer - Savfk Resources: https://www.marine.usf.edu/pjocean/packets/f98/f98u3le3.pdf https://wn.com/Exploring_Life_On_The_Deep_Sea_Floor Deep sea life must choose whether to live on the bottom, or to brave the expansive open ocean of the midwater zone. Creatures that adapt to life in the midwater zone are known as pelagic, while creatures that evolve to be well-suited to an existence on or near the sea floor, are known as benthic or demersal. These two groups could not be more different, but which is a more effective way of life? First, let’s take a look at the demersal creatures of the deep - the bottom-feeders, clinging to rocky seamounts, and burrowing into the mud. We will begin our investigation in the shallows, and follow the ever-deepening sea-floor down to the far depths of the deep ocean. The diversity of organisms that are adapted to life near the bottom of the deep sea is immense - and far greater than that of pelagic organisms. Life thrives on every part of the ocean floor, from near-shore ecosystems, all the way to the abyss. But the deeper you go, the stranger they become. Part 2 | Pelagic Deep Sea Life: https://youtu.be/FqHSZ23x1LE DEEP SEA HUB: https://naturalworldfacts.com/deep-sea-hub 00:00 - Introduction: Pelagic and Demersal Life 00:55 - Part 1: Demersal Creatures of the Deep 01:10 - The Diversity of Benthic Life 01:43 - The Life of Coral Reefs 02:15 - Life at the Continental Shelf 02:29 - Cold-water Coral and Sponge Gardens 03:07 - Life on the Abyssal Plain 03:29 - Advantages of Living on the Sea Floor 03:48 - The Sea-Floor Nutrient Cycle 04:09 - Why Benthic Life is so Abundant 04:45 - The Extent of the Abyssal Plain 05:00 - Deep Sea Infauna and Epifauna 05:26 - The Role of Benthic Life in the Ecosystem 05:53 - Ancient Crinoids of the Deep Sea 06:32 - Benthic Fish of the Deep Sea 07:07 - Limitations of Life on the Sea Floor 07:25 - Seamounts Explained 07:49 - Why Seamounts are Biological Hotspots 08:05 - Life at Cold-Water Reefs 08:31 - Life at Deep Sea Brine Pools 09:04 - Life at Hydrothermal Vents 09:31 - Life at the Bottom of the Mariana Trench 09:53 - The Mariana Snailfish 10:08 - Conclusion: Living on the Sea-floor is an Advantage 10:46 - The Deep Sea Hub Footage used belongs to Schmidt Ocean Institute, MBARI, OceanX and the Ocean Exploration Institute. #deepsea #wildlife #nature #documentary #ocean #marinebiology #science #biology Music Used: Away - Patrick Patrikios Feels - Patrick Patrikios Simple - Patrick Patrikios Prism - Bobby Richards Strange the Dreamer - Savfk Resources: https://www.marine.usf.edu/pjocean/packets/f98/f98u3le3.pdf * published: 16 Feb 2021 * views: 303149 5:10 THE DEEPEST DIVE IN ANTARCTICA REVEALS A SEA FLOOR TEEMING WITH LIFE * Order: Reorder * Duration: 5:10 * Uploaded Date: 16 Mar 2018 * views: 17116168 http://www.oceanx.org http://www.instagram.com/oceanx http://www.facebook.com/oceanxorg http://www.twitter.com/oceanx No one really knows what’s in the deep oc... http://www.oceanx.org http://www.instagram.com/oceanx http://www.facebook.com/oceanxorg http://www.twitter.com/oceanx No one really knows what’s in the deep ocean in Antarctica. Now we have the technology to reach into the ocean depths, we accompanied scientist and deep-sea explorer Jon Copley and became the first to descend to 1000 meters underwater in Antarctica for Blue Planet II. The exotic creatures we found there will astonish you. This video is a part of Our Blue Planet, a joint venture between OceanX and BBC Earth to get people talking about the ocean. Join the conversation on Twitter: @OurBluePlanet. #oceanx #alucia #antarctica #submarines Director: Mark Dalio Director of Photography (AP): Janssen Powers Director of Photography (BBC): Ted Giffords 2nd Camera/Drone Op: James DuBourdieu Field Audio: Mike Kasic Production Manager: Samantha Loshiavo Associate Producer: Marjorie Crowley Digital Producer: Erika Jarvis Editors: Ryan Quinn, Brian Golding, Janssen Powers Colorist: James DuBourdieu Sound Re-recording Mixer: Ryan Quinn Assistant Editor: Jorge Alvarez Post Production Supervisor: Brian Golding Executive Producer: Jennifer Hile https://wn.com/The_Deepest_Dive_In_Antarctica_Reveals_A_Sea_Floor_Teeming_With_Life http://www.oceanx.org http://www.instagram.com/oceanx http://www.facebook.com/oceanxorg http://www.twitter.com/oceanx No one really knows what’s in the deep ocean in Antarctica. Now we have the technology to reach into the ocean depths, we accompanied scientist and deep-sea explorer Jon Copley and became the first to descend to 1000 meters underwater in Antarctica for Blue Planet II. The exotic creatures we found there will astonish you. This video is a part of Our Blue Planet, a joint venture between OceanX and BBC Earth to get people talking about the ocean. Join the conversation on Twitter: @OurBluePlanet. #oceanx #alucia #antarctica #submarines Director: Mark Dalio Director of Photography (AP): Janssen Powers Director of Photography (BBC): Ted Giffords 2nd Camera/Drone Op: James DuBourdieu Field Audio: Mike Kasic Production Manager: Samantha Loshiavo Associate Producer: Marjorie Crowley Digital Producer: Erika Jarvis Editors: Ryan Quinn, Brian Golding, Janssen Powers Colorist: James DuBourdieu Sound Re-recording Mixer: Ryan Quinn Assistant Editor: Jorge Alvarez Post Production Supervisor: Brian Golding Executive Producer: Jennifer Hile * published: 16 Mar 2018 * views: 17116168 17:38 THE MOST HORRIFYING PLACES IN THE OCEAN 11,034 M BELOW SEA LEVEL * Order: Reorder * Duration: 17:38 * Uploaded Date: 19 Jun 2022 * views: 5586728 Subscribe to my channel - http://bit.ly/ReYOUniverse The world's oceans are so underexplored that if you dive deeper than 3,500 meters, there's a good chance t... Subscribe to my channel - http://bit.ly/ReYOUniverse The world's oceans are so underexplored that if you dive deeper than 3,500 meters, there's a good chance to discover a new species unknown to science. There's also a good chance you'll find debris and garbage. Oceans cover more than 70% of the Earth's surface. The average depth of the oceans is about 3.7 kilometers, and since light can only penetrate to a depth of 100 meters, darkness reigns deeper underwater. Let’s push this statement one step further and conclude that since most of the planet is covered by water, it means that most of the Earth exists in total darkness. Water in the oceans account for almost 96% of the Earth's water. The portion of fresh water compared to seawater is so small that if the fresh water that flows into the ocean is spread over the surface of the ocean, it would have been about 1.25 meters thick. According to the U.S. Journal of Science and Engineering, 94% of all life on Earth lives in water. It means that all of us who live on land belong to a very, very small minority. So what mysteries lurk in the depths of the oceans? The deeper we go, the more curious it gets. It seems we know more about the surface of Mars than about the ocean floor of our planet. What's going on in the deepest places, we didn't know at all, at least until recently. Lack of light and extreme pressure makes this part of the ocean difficult to explore. Today we're going on a journey into the very depths. We're going to find out what the bottom of the ocean looks like, what it consists of and what happens there. Who knows what we will find there… We are going to dive deep to the places with most elien conditions! What was found in the deepest places of the ocean? #marianatrench #ocean #reyouniverse https://wn.com/The_Most_Horrifying_Places_In_The_Ocean_11,034_M_Below_Sea_Level Subscribe to my channel - http://bit.ly/ReYOUniverse The world's oceans are so underexplored that if you dive deeper than 3,500 meters, there's a good chance to discover a new species unknown to science. There's also a good chance you'll find debris and garbage. Oceans cover more than 70% of the Earth's surface. The average depth of the oceans is about 3.7 kilometers, and since light can only penetrate to a depth of 100 meters, darkness reigns deeper underwater. Let’s push this statement one step further and conclude that since most of the planet is covered by water, it means that most of the Earth exists in total darkness. Water in the oceans account for almost 96% of the Earth's water. The portion of fresh water compared to seawater is so small that if the fresh water that flows into the ocean is spread over the surface of the ocean, it would have been about 1.25 meters thick. According to the U.S. Journal of Science and Engineering, 94% of all life on Earth lives in water. It means that all of us who live on land belong to a very, very small minority. So what mysteries lurk in the depths of the oceans? The deeper we go, the more curious it gets. It seems we know more about the surface of Mars than about the ocean floor of our planet. What's going on in the deepest places, we didn't know at all, at least until recently. Lack of light and extreme pressure makes this part of the ocean difficult to explore. Today we're going on a journey into the very depths. We're going to find out what the bottom of the ocean looks like, what it consists of and what happens there. Who knows what we will find there… We are going to dive deep to the places with most elien conditions! What was found in the deepest places of the ocean? #marianatrench #ocean #reyouniverse * published: 19 Jun 2022 * views: 5586728 3:15 BOATY MCBOATFACE SUBMARINE COMPLETES TWO MONTHS EXPLORATION (GLOBAL SEAS) 9/AUG/2024 * Order: Reorder * Duration: 3:15 * Uploaded Date: 09 Aug 2024 * views: 72 Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration. #submarine #BoatyMcBoatface There are earlier reports on this ship (name, etc.) on this channel h... Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration. #submarine #BoatyMcBoatface There are earlier reports on this ship (name, etc.) on this channel here: https://youtu.be/yVI6yDeq_MQ https://wn.com/Boaty_Mcboatface_Submarine_Completes_Two_Months_Exploration_(Global_Seas)_9_Aug_2024 Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration. #submarine #BoatyMcBoatface There are earlier reports on this ship (name, etc.) on this channel here: https://youtu.be/yVI6yDeq_MQ * published: 09 Aug 2024 * views: 72 14:49 THE DEEP OCEAN IS THE FINAL FRONTIER ON PLANET EARTH * Order: Reorder * Duration: 14:49 * Uploaded Date: 23 Mar 2017 * views: 6215337 Watch the latest in the Ocean series - How to stop plastics getting into the ocean: https://youtu.be/D7EdgCxFZ8Q The ocean covers 70% of our planet. The deep-s... Watch the latest in the Ocean series - How to stop plastics getting into the ocean: https://youtu.be/D7EdgCxFZ8Q The ocean covers 70% of our planet. The deep-sea floor is a realm that is largely unexplored, but cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to go deeper than ever before. Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http://econ.trib.al/rWl91R7 Beneath the waves is a mysterious world that takes up to 95% of Earth's living space. Only three people have ever reached the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean. The deep is a world without sunlight, of freezing temperatures, and immense pressure. It's remained largely unexplored until now. Cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to explore deeper than ever before. They are opening up a whole new world of potential benefits to humanity. The risks are great, but the rewards could be greater. From a vast wealth of resources to clues about the origins of life, the race is on to the final frontier The Okeanos Explorer, the American government state-of-the-art vessel, designed for every type of deep ocean exploration from discovering new species to investigating shipwrecks. On board, engineers and scientists come together to answer questions about the origins of life and human history. Today the Okeanos is on a mission to investigate the wreck of a World War one submarine. Engineer Bobby Moore is part of a team who has developed the technology for this type of mission. The “deep discover”, a remote operating vehicle is equipped with 20 powerful LED lights and designed to withstand the huge pressure four miles down. Equivalent to 50 jumbo jets stacked on top of a person While the crew of the Okeanos send robots to investigate the deep, some of their fellow scientists prefer a more hands-on approach. Doctor Greg stone is a world leading marine biologist with over 8,000 hours under the sea. He has been exploring the abyss in person for 30 years. The technology opening up the deep is also opening up opportunity. Not just to witness the diversity of life but to glimpse vast amounts of rare mineral resources. Some of the world's most valuable metals can be found deep under the waves. A discovery that has begun to pique the interest of the global mining industry. The boldest of mining companies are heading to the deep drawn by the allure of a new Gold Rush. But to exploit it they're also beating a path to another strange new world. In an industrial estate in the north of England, SMD is one of the world's leading manufacturers of remote underwater equipment. The industrial technology the company has developed has made mining possible several kilometers beneath the ocean surface. With an estimated 150 trillion dollars’ worth of gold alone, deep-sea mining has the potential to transform the global economy. With so much still to discover, mining in the deep ocean could have unknowable impact. It's not just life today that may need protecting; reaching the deep ocean might just allow researchers to answer some truly fundamental questions. Hydrothermal vents, hot springs on the ocean floor, are cracks in the Earth's crust. Some claim they could help scientists glimpse the origins of life itself. We might still be years away from unlocking the mysteries of the deep. Even with the latest technology, this kind of exploration is always challenging. As the crew of the Okeanos comes to terms with a scale of the challenge and the opportunity that lies beneath, what they and others discover could transform humanity's understanding of how to protect the ocean. It's the most hostile environment on earth, but the keys to our future may lie in the deep. Check out Economist Films: http://films.economist.com/ Check out The Economist’s full video catalogue: http://econ.st/20IehQk Like The Economist on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheEconomist/ Follow The Economist on Twitter: https://twitter.com/theeconomist Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theeconomist/ Follow us on LINE: http://econ.st/1WXkOo6 Follow us on Medium: https://medium.com/@the_economist https://wn.com/The_Deep_Ocean_Is_The_Final_Frontier_On_Planet_Earth Watch the latest in the Ocean series - How to stop plastics getting into the ocean: https://youtu.be/D7EdgCxFZ8Q The ocean covers 70% of our planet. The deep-sea floor is a realm that is largely unexplored, but cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to go deeper than ever before. Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http://econ.trib.al/rWl91R7 Beneath the waves is a mysterious world that takes up to 95% of Earth's living space. Only three people have ever reached the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean. The deep is a world without sunlight, of freezing temperatures, and immense pressure. It's remained largely unexplored until now. Cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to explore deeper than ever before. They are opening up a whole new world of potential benefits to humanity. The risks are great, but the rewards could be greater. From a vast wealth of resources to clues about the origins of life, the race is on to the final frontier The Okeanos Explorer, the American government state-of-the-art vessel, designed for every type of deep ocean exploration from discovering new species to investigating shipwrecks. On board, engineers and scientists come together to answer questions about the origins of life and human history. Today the Okeanos is on a mission to investigate the wreck of a World War one submarine. Engineer Bobby Moore is part of a team who has developed the technology for this type of mission. The “deep discover”, a remote operating vehicle is equipped with 20 powerful LED lights and designed to withstand the huge pressure four miles down. Equivalent to 50 jumbo jets stacked on top of a person While the crew of the Okeanos send robots to investigate the deep, some of their fellow scientists prefer a more hands-on approach. Doctor Greg stone is a world leading marine biologist with over 8,000 hours under the sea. He has been exploring the abyss in person for 30 years. The technology opening up the deep is also opening up opportunity. Not just to witness the diversity of life but to glimpse vast amounts of rare mineral resources. Some of the world's most valuable metals can be found deep under the waves. A discovery that has begun to pique the interest of the global mining industry. The boldest of mining companies are heading to the deep drawn by the allure of a new Gold Rush. But to exploit it they're also beating a path to another strange new world. In an industrial estate in the north of England, SMD is one of the world's leading manufacturers of remote underwater equipment. The industrial technology the company has developed has made mining possible several kilometers beneath the ocean surface. With an estimated 150 trillion dollars’ worth of gold alone, deep-sea mining has the potential to transform the global economy. With so much still to discover, mining in the deep ocean could have unknowable impact. It's not just life today that may need protecting; reaching the deep ocean might just allow researchers to answer some truly fundamental questions. Hydrothermal vents, hot springs on the ocean floor, are cracks in the Earth's crust. Some claim they could help scientists glimpse the origins of life itself. We might still be years away from unlocking the mysteries of the deep. Even with the latest technology, this kind of exploration is always challenging. As the crew of the Okeanos comes to terms with a scale of the challenge and the opportunity that lies beneath, what they and others discover could transform humanity's understanding of how to protect the ocean. It's the most hostile environment on earth, but the keys to our future may lie in the deep. Check out Economist Films: http://films.economist.com/ Check out The Economist’s full video catalogue: http://econ.st/20IehQk Like The Economist on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheEconomist/ Follow The Economist on Twitter: https://twitter.com/theeconomist Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theeconomist/ Follow us on LINE: http://econ.st/1WXkOo6 Follow us on Medium: https://medium.com/@the_economist * published: 23 Mar 2017 * views: 6215337 back * Most Related * Most Recent * Most Popular * Top Rated * expand screen to full width * repeat playlist * shuffle * replay video * clear playlist restore * images list developed with YouTube PLAYLIST TIME: back * Most Related * Most Recent * Most Popular * Top Rated * Reorder 2:19 Visualizing Deep-sea Mining remove from playlistshare this video VISUALIZING DEEP-SEA MINING * Report rights infringement * published: 10 Dec 2019 * views: 164205 This animation demonstrates how a collector vehicle launched from a ship during deep-sea mining would travel 15,000 feet below sea level to collect polymetallic nodules containing essential minerals. Narrated by MIT Professor Thomas Peacock. For more information, please watch: https://youtu.be/MWvCtF1itQM * Show More * Reorder 11:13 The race to mine the bottom of the ocean remove from playlistshare this video THE RACE TO MINE THE BOTTOM OF THE OCEAN * Report rights infringement * published: 11 Oct 2023 * views: 2730518 We have a lot to gain — and a lot to lose — from deep-sea mining. Help keep Vox free for everybody: http://www.vox.com/give-now Subscribe to our channel and turn on notifications (🔔) so you don't miss any videos: http://goo.gl/0bsAjO There are metallic deposits scattered throughout our ocean floors — among hydrothermal vents, under the crust of seamounts, and scattered along sea plains in the form of rocks. As it happens, in our search for climate solutions, these metals have become more critical than ever to help us transition away from fossil fuels. We need them for everything like electric car batteries, copper wiring for electrification and wind turbines. Our land-based deposits have met our needs so far, but it’s unclear whether they will continue to, or whether we’ll want to keep destroying the environment to do so. This video explains the history and the debate over mining metals in the deep sea and why one Canadian company, The Metals Company, is leading the rush there. There are huge environmental implications for digging up seafloor ecosystems as well as ethical ones: Metal-rich zones like the Clarion-Clipperton Zone lie in international waters that technically belong to everyone. A United Nations body located in Kingston, Jamaica, the International Seabed Authority, is faced with an urgent dilemma over how to regulate mining, whether the environmental harm is worth the benefits to solving our climate crisis, and how to fairly share the profits from this shared resource. Correction: at 7:45, the company rang the opening bell at Nasdaq not New York Stock Exchange. You can dig into the exploration contracts issued by the International Seabed Authority here: https://www.isa.org.jm/exploration-contracts/ The New York Times has done some important investigative work on deep sea mining: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/29/world/deep-sea-mining.html This study provides a thorough overview of some of the ecosystems with metallic deposits: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2017.00418/full Here is more information about DeepCCZ, which is leading research on the ecosystem of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone: https://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/18ccz/welcome.html Note: In a previous version of this video, the voice-over incorrectly stated miles instead of meters at 0:15. It has since been corrected. Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http://www.vox.com/give-now Watch our full video catalog: http://goo.gl/IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http://tiktok.com/@voxdotcom Check out our articles: https://www.vox.com/ Listen to our podcasts: https://www.vox.com/podcasts * Show More * Reorder 5:10 GET MORE JELLYFISH, FLASHLIGHTS & KEGS FROM AUTUMN SEABED EXPLORATION EVENT - SURVIVOR.io GUIDE remove from playlistshare this video GET MORE JELLYFISH, FLASHLIGHTS & KEGS FROM AUTUMN SEABED EXPLORATION EVENT - SURVIVOR.IO GUIDE * Report rights infringement * published: 27 Sep 2023 * views: 4366 #Survivorio #Autumn #seabed #Exploration #event #jellyfish #Kegs #flashlight 0:00 - Intro 0:25 - GET CLAN REWARDS! 2:15 - HOW MANY CHESTS TO OPEN? 2:54 - SPEND GEMS OR NOT? 3:31 - GET MOST REWARDS! 3:39 - HOW IT WORKS? FLASHLIGHT, KEG, SEAWEED... SUPPORT MY CHANNEL ON: PAYPAL: https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=ZGS42SCX7FCQW JOIN MEMBERSHIP: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCDcNY27ca35ClqQ09LrxrXQ/join SUBSCRIBE PlayMe SHORTS: https://youtube.com/channel/UC2UVm0Gzd-WY4dggNSZ29hQ JOIN MY DISCORD⬇️ https://discord.gg/3sDVdSjX JOIN Ultimate Survivors for more useful Lists⬇️ https://discord.gg/ultimatesurvivors Official SURVIVORio Discord⬇️ https://discord.gg/survivorio * Show More * Reorder 6:11 Diving bell boat: Walking down to the Rhine's riverbed remove from playlistshare this video DIVING BELL BOAT: WALKING DOWN TO THE RHINE'S RIVERBED * Report rights infringement * published: 02 Sep 2021 * views: 540440 The diving bell boat "Carl Straat" patrols the stretch between Alsace and the Netherlands. Captain Thomas Bach keeps the riverbed clean. His ship features a steel diving bell that can be lowered, using overpressure to displace the water at the bottom of the Rhine. He can then stay dry while working below the water; retrieving lost anchors, for example. For the crew, it is a seven-meter descent via the shaft pipe to the bottom of the Rhine. There they have to work in very harsh conditions, from compressed air to extreme heat in summer and cold in winter. Excerpt from the documentary series "The Rhine From Above". Click here to watch all episodes: http://bit.ly/RhineFromAbove © 2014, Licensed by vidicom * Show More * Reorder 13:34 Mariana Trench | In Pursuit of the Abyss remove from playlistshare this video MARIANA TRENCH | IN PURSUIT OF THE ABYSS * Report rights infringement * published: 22 Jun 2021 * views: 20310552 The depths of the Mariana Trench conceal many peculiar creatures. This deep sea film is sponsored by NordVPN. Go to https://nordvpn.com/naturalworldfacts or use code naturalworldfacts to get a 2-year plan plus a bonus gift with a huge discount. Check out the NordVPN YouTube channel here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCWNR... The Mariana Trench sits like a crescent-shaped dent in the floor of the Pacific. A 2,550 km long, 69 km wide fracture that plummets down into a pure black void of the Hadal Zone. At the bottom, it hosts the deepest known location on Earth. The Challenger Deep, 11,033 metres or 36,200 feet beneath the waves. The trench itself is but one part of a global network of deep scars that cut across the ocean floor. Features that formed from a process called subduction. In the case of the Mariana Trench, the western edge of the Pacific Plate was thrust beneath the smaller Mariana Plate to the west, creating the deep fracture. Molten material then rose through volcanoes near the trench, building the nearby Mariana Islands. 00:00 - Introduction 01:18 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - How the Trench Formed 02:41 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - An 'Impossible' Frontier 03:40 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - The HMS Challenger 04:11 - Chapter 2: In Pursuit of the Abyss - The Bathyscape Trieste, 1960 05:51 - Chapter 2: In Pursuit of the Abyss - The Deepsea Challenge, 2012 06:38 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Kaiko Mission 07:56 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Hadal Amphipod 09:00 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - Abyssal Sea Cucumbers 09:45 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Mariana Snailfish 10:17 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - Denizens of the Abyss 11:05 - Conclusion CHECK OUT OUR DEEP SEA WEBSITE: https://naturalworldfacts.com/deep-se... I do not own any of the footage. I write the script, narrate, and edit what footage I can find, which is allowed due to YouTube's 'Fair Use' policy. Footage used is from various YouTube sources, MBARI, NatGeo, the Ocean Exploration Institute and the Schmidt Ocean Institute, as well as other sources. Music Used: Blue Danube by Strauss Bach Cello Suite No. 1, G Major, Predule, performed by Cooper Cannell Always (Hebridean Mix) by Jessica Curry This Godforsaken Aerial by Jessica Curry Ode to Joy performed by Cooper Cannell #deepsea #wildlife #nature #documentary #ocean #marinebiology #science #biology Resources: http://awesomeocean.com/top-stories/8... http://www.deepseachallenge.com/the-e... * Show More * Reorder 11:14 Exploring Life on the Deep Sea Floor remove from playlistshare this video EXPLORING LIFE ON THE DEEP SEA FLOOR * Report rights infringement * published: 16 Feb 2021 * views: 303149 Deep sea life must choose whether to live on the bottom, or to brave the expansive open ocean of the midwater zone. Creatures that adapt to life in the midwater zone are known as pelagic, while creatures that evolve to be well-suited to an existence on or near the sea floor, are known as benthic or demersal. These two groups could not be more different, but which is a more effective way of life? First, let’s take a look at the demersal creatures of the deep - the bottom-feeders, clinging to rocky seamounts, and burrowing into the mud. We will begin our investigation in the shallows, and follow the ever-deepening sea-floor down to the far depths of the deep ocean. The diversity of organisms that are adapted to life near the bottom of the deep sea is immense - and far greater than that of pelagic organisms. Life thrives on every part of the ocean floor, from near-shore ecosystems, all the way to the abyss. But the deeper you go, the stranger they become. Part 2 | Pelagic Deep Sea Life: https://youtu.be/FqHSZ23x1LE DEEP SEA HUB: https://naturalworldfacts.com/deep-sea-hub 00:00 - Introduction: Pelagic and Demersal Life 00:55 - Part 1: Demersal Creatures of the Deep 01:10 - The Diversity of Benthic Life 01:43 - The Life of Coral Reefs 02:15 - Life at the Continental Shelf 02:29 - Cold-water Coral and Sponge Gardens 03:07 - Life on the Abyssal Plain 03:29 - Advantages of Living on the Sea Floor 03:48 - The Sea-Floor Nutrient Cycle 04:09 - Why Benthic Life is so Abundant 04:45 - The Extent of the Abyssal Plain 05:00 - Deep Sea Infauna and Epifauna 05:26 - The Role of Benthic Life in the Ecosystem 05:53 - Ancient Crinoids of the Deep Sea 06:32 - Benthic Fish of the Deep Sea 07:07 - Limitations of Life on the Sea Floor 07:25 - Seamounts Explained 07:49 - Why Seamounts are Biological Hotspots 08:05 - Life at Cold-Water Reefs 08:31 - Life at Deep Sea Brine Pools 09:04 - Life at Hydrothermal Vents 09:31 - Life at the Bottom of the Mariana Trench 09:53 - The Mariana Snailfish 10:08 - Conclusion: Living on the Sea-floor is an Advantage 10:46 - The Deep Sea Hub Footage used belongs to Schmidt Ocean Institute, MBARI, OceanX and the Ocean Exploration Institute. #deepsea #wildlife #nature #documentary #ocean #marinebiology #science #biology Music Used: Away - Patrick Patrikios Feels - Patrick Patrikios Simple - Patrick Patrikios Prism - Bobby Richards Strange the Dreamer - Savfk Resources: https://www.marine.usf.edu/pjocean/packets/f98/f98u3le3.pdf * Show More * Reorder 5:10 The Deepest Dive in Antarctica Reveals a Sea Floor Teeming With Life remove from playlistshare this video THE DEEPEST DIVE IN ANTARCTICA REVEALS A SEA FLOOR TEEMING WITH LIFE * Report rights infringement * published: 16 Mar 2018 * views: 17116168 http://www.oceanx.org http://www.instagram.com/oceanx http://www.facebook.com/oceanxorg http://www.twitter.com/oceanx No one really knows what’s in the deep ocean in Antarctica. Now we have the technology to reach into the ocean depths, we accompanied scientist and deep-sea explorer Jon Copley and became the first to descend to 1000 meters underwater in Antarctica for Blue Planet II. The exotic creatures we found there will astonish you. This video is a part of Our Blue Planet, a joint venture between OceanX and BBC Earth to get people talking about the ocean. Join the conversation on Twitter: @OurBluePlanet. #oceanx #alucia #antarctica #submarines Director: Mark Dalio Director of Photography (AP): Janssen Powers Director of Photography (BBC): Ted Giffords 2nd Camera/Drone Op: James DuBourdieu Field Audio: Mike Kasic Production Manager: Samantha Loshiavo Associate Producer: Marjorie Crowley Digital Producer: Erika Jarvis Editors: Ryan Quinn, Brian Golding, Janssen Powers Colorist: James DuBourdieu Sound Re-recording Mixer: Ryan Quinn Assistant Editor: Jorge Alvarez Post Production Supervisor: Brian Golding Executive Producer: Jennifer Hile * Show More * Reorder 17:38 THE MOST HORRIFYING PLACES IN THE OCEAN 11,034 m BELOW SEA LEVEL remove from playlistshare this video THE MOST HORRIFYING PLACES IN THE OCEAN 11,034 M BELOW SEA LEVEL * Report rights infringement * published: 19 Jun 2022 * views: 5586728 Subscribe to my channel - http://bit.ly/ReYOUniverse The world's oceans are so underexplored that if you dive deeper than 3,500 meters, there's a good chance to discover a new species unknown to science. There's also a good chance you'll find debris and garbage. Oceans cover more than 70% of the Earth's surface. The average depth of the oceans is about 3.7 kilometers, and since light can only penetrate to a depth of 100 meters, darkness reigns deeper underwater. Let’s push this statement one step further and conclude that since most of the planet is covered by water, it means that most of the Earth exists in total darkness. Water in the oceans account for almost 96% of the Earth's water. The portion of fresh water compared to seawater is so small that if the fresh water that flows into the ocean is spread over the surface of the ocean, it would have been about 1.25 meters thick. According to the U.S. Journal of Science and Engineering, 94% of all life on Earth lives in water. It means that all of us who live on land belong to a very, very small minority. So what mysteries lurk in the depths of the oceans? The deeper we go, the more curious it gets. It seems we know more about the surface of Mars than about the ocean floor of our planet. What's going on in the deepest places, we didn't know at all, at least until recently. Lack of light and extreme pressure makes this part of the ocean difficult to explore. Today we're going on a journey into the very depths. We're going to find out what the bottom of the ocean looks like, what it consists of and what happens there. Who knows what we will find there… We are going to dive deep to the places with most elien conditions! What was found in the deepest places of the ocean? #marianatrench #ocean #reyouniverse * Show More * Reorder 3:15 Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration (Global seas) 9/Aug/2024 remove from playlistshare this video BOATY MCBOATFACE SUBMARINE COMPLETES TWO MONTHS EXPLORATION (GLOBAL SEAS) 9/AUG/2024 * Report rights infringement * published: 09 Aug 2024 * views: 72 Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration. #submarine #BoatyMcBoatface There are earlier reports on this ship (name, etc.) on this channel here: https://youtu.be/yVI6yDeq_MQ * Show More * Reorder 14:49 The deep ocean is the final frontier on planet Earth remove from playlistshare this video THE DEEP OCEAN IS THE FINAL FRONTIER ON PLANET EARTH * Report rights infringement * published: 23 Mar 2017 * views: 6215337 Watch the latest in the Ocean series - How to stop plastics getting into the ocean: https://youtu.be/D7EdgCxFZ8Q The ocean covers 70% of our planet. The deep-sea floor is a realm that is largely unexplored, but cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to go deeper than ever before. Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http://econ.trib.al/rWl91R7 Beneath the waves is a mysterious world that takes up to 95% of Earth's living space. Only three people have ever reached the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean. The deep is a world without sunlight, of freezing temperatures, and immense pressure. It's remained largely unexplored until now. Cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to explore deeper than ever before. They are opening up a whole new world of potential benefits to humanity. The risks are great, but the rewards could be greater. From a vast wealth of resources to clues about the origins of life, the race is on to the final frontier The Okeanos Explorer, the American government state-of-the-art vessel, designed for every type of deep ocean exploration from discovering new species to investigating shipwrecks. On board, engineers and scientists come together to answer questions about the origins of life and human history. Today the Okeanos is on a mission to investigate the wreck of a World War one submarine. Engineer Bobby Moore is part of a team who has developed the technology for this type of mission. The “deep discover”, a remote operating vehicle is equipped with 20 powerful LED lights and designed to withstand the huge pressure four miles down. Equivalent to 50 jumbo jets stacked on top of a person While the crew of the Okeanos send robots to investigate the deep, some of their fellow scientists prefer a more hands-on approach. Doctor Greg stone is a world leading marine biologist with over 8,000 hours under the sea. He has been exploring the abyss in person for 30 years. The technology opening up the deep is also opening up opportunity. Not just to witness the diversity of life but to glimpse vast amounts of rare mineral resources. Some of the world's most valuable metals can be found deep under the waves. A discovery that has begun to pique the interest of the global mining industry. The boldest of mining companies are heading to the deep drawn by the allure of a new Gold Rush. But to exploit it they're also beating a path to another strange new world. In an industrial estate in the north of England, SMD is one of the world's leading manufacturers of remote underwater equipment. The industrial technology the company has developed has made mining possible several kilometers beneath the ocean surface. With an estimated 150 trillion dollars’ worth of gold alone, deep-sea mining has the potential to transform the global economy. With so much still to discover, mining in the deep ocean could have unknowable impact. It's not just life today that may need protecting; reaching the deep ocean might just allow researchers to answer some truly fundamental questions. Hydrothermal vents, hot springs on the ocean floor, are cracks in the Earth's crust. Some claim they could help scientists glimpse the origins of life itself. We might still be years away from unlocking the mysteries of the deep. Even with the latest technology, this kind of exploration is always challenging. As the crew of the Okeanos comes to terms with a scale of the challenge and the opportunity that lies beneath, what they and others discover could transform humanity's understanding of how to protect the ocean. It's the most hostile environment on earth, but the keys to our future may lie in the deep. Check out Economist Films: http://films.economist.com/ Check out The Economist’s full video catalogue: http://econ.st/20IehQk Like The Economist on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TheEconomist/ Follow The Economist on Twitter: https://twitter.com/theeconomist Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theeconomist/ Follow us on LINE: http://econ.st/1WXkOo6 Follow us on Medium: https://medium.com/@the_economist * Show More * expand screen to full width * repeat playlist * shuffle * replay video * clear playlist restore * images list developed with YouTube PLAYLIST TIME: 0:00 / 1:30:33 VISUALIZING DEEP-SEA MINING * Report rights infringement * published: 10 Dec 2019 * views: 164205 This animation demonstrates how a collector vehicle launched from a ship during deep-sea mining would travel 15,000 feet below sea level to collect polymetallic nodules containing essential minerals. Narrated by MIT Professor Thomas Peacock. For more information, please watch: https://youtu.be/MWvCtF1itQM * Show More 2:19 Visualizing Deep-sea Mining This animation demonstrates how a collector vehicle launched from a ship during deep-sea m... published: 10 Dec 2019 Play in Full Screen Visualizing Deep-sea Mining VISUALIZING DEEP-SEA MINING * Report rights infringement * published: 10 Dec 2019 * views: 164205 This animation demonstrates how a collector vehicle launched from a ship during deep-sea mining would travel 15,000 feet below sea level to collect polymetallic nodules containing essential minerals. Narrated by MIT Professor Thomas Peacock. For more information, please watch: https:// youtu. be/ MWvCtF1itQM * Show More 11:13 The race to mine the bottom of the ocean We have a lot to gain — and a lot to lose — from deep-sea mining. Help keep Vox free for ... published: 11 Oct 2023 Play in Full Screen The race to mine the bottom of the ocean THE RACE TO MINE THE BOTTOM OF THE OCEAN * Report rights infringement * published: 11 Oct 2023 * views: 2730518 We have a lot to gain — and a lot to lose — from deep-sea mining. Help keep Vox free for everybody: http:// www. vox. com/ give-now Subscribe to our channel and turn on notifications (🔔) so you don't miss any videos: http:// goo. gl/ 0bsAjO There are metallic deposits scattered throughout our ocean floors — among hydrothermal vents, under the crust of seamounts, and scattered along sea plains in the form of rocks. As it happens, in our search for climate solutions, these metals have become more critical than ever to help us transition away from fossil fuels. We need them for everything like electric car batteries, copper wiring for electrification and wind turbines. Our land-based deposits have met our needs so far, but it’s unclear whether they will continue to, or whether we’ll want to keep destroying the environment to do so. This video explains the history and the debate over mining metals in the deep sea and why one Canadian company, The Metals Company, is leading the rush there. There are huge environmental implications for digging up seafloor ecosystems as well as ethical ones: Metal-rich zones like the Clarion-Clipperton Zone lie in international waters that technically belong to everyone. A United Nations body located in Kingston, Jamaica, the International Seabed Authority, is faced with an urgent dilemma over how to regulate mining, whether the environmental harm is worth the benefits to solving our climate crisis, and how to fairly share the profits from this shared resource. Correction: at 7:45, the company rang the opening bell at Nasdaq not New York Stock Exchange. You can dig into the exploration contracts issued by the International Seabed Authority here: https:// www. isa. org. jm/ exploration-contracts/ The New York Times has done some important investigative work on deep sea mining: https:// www. nytimes. com/ 2022/ 08/ 29/ world/ deep-sea-mining. html This study provides a thorough overview of some of the ecosystems with metallic deposits: https:// www. frontiersin. org/ articles/ 10. 3389/ fmars. 2017. 00418/ full Here is more information about DeepCCZ, which is leading research on the ecosystem of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone: https:// oceanexplorer. noaa. gov/ explorations/ 18ccz/ welcome. html Note: In a previous version of this video, the voice-over incorrectly stated miles instead of meters at 0:15. It has since been corrected. Vox is on a mission is to help everyone, regardless of income or status, understand our complicated world so that we can all help shape it. Part of that mission is keeping our work free. You can help us do that by making a gift: http:// www. vox. com/ give-now Watch our full video catalog: http:// goo. gl/ IZONyE Follow Vox on TikTok: http:// tiktok. com/@ voxdotcom Check out our articles: https:// www. vox. com/ Listen to our podcasts: https:// www. vox. com/ podcasts * Show More 5:10 GET MORE JELLYFISH, FLASHLIGHTS & KEGS FROM AUTUMN SEABED EXPLORATION EVENT - SURVIVOR. io GUIDE #Survivorio #Autumn #seabed #Exploration #event #jellyfish #Kegs #flashlight 0:00 - Int... published: 27 Sep 2023 Play in Full Screen GET MORE JELLYFISH, FLASHLIGHTS & KEGS FROM AUTUMN SEABED EXPLORATION EVENT - SURVIVOR. io GUIDE GET MORE JELLYFISH, FLASHLIGHTS & KEGS FROM AUTUMN SEABED EXPLORATION EVENT - SURVIVOR. IO GUIDE * Report rights infringement * published: 27 Sep 2023 * views: 4366 #Survivorio #Autumn #seabed #Exploration #event #jellyfish #Kegs #flashlight 0:00 - Intro 0:25 - GET CLAN REWARDS! 2:15 - HOW MANY CHESTS TO OPEN? 2:54 - SPEND GEMS OR NOT? 3:31 - GET MOST REWARDS! 3:39 - HOW IT WORKS? FLASHLIGHT, KEG, SEAWEED... SUPPORT MY CHANNEL ON: PAYPAL: https:// www. paypal. com/ donate/? hosted_ button_ id=ZGS42SCX7FCQW JOIN MEMBERSHIP: https:// www. youtube. com/ channel/ UCDcNY27ca35ClqQ09LrxrXQ/ join SUBSCRIBE PlayMe SHORTS: https:// youtube. com/ channel/ UC2UVm0Gzd-WY4dggNSZ29hQ JOIN MY DISCORD⬇️ https:// discord. gg/ 3sDVdSjX JOIN Ultimate Survivors for more useful Lists⬇️ https:// discord. gg/ ultimatesurvivors Official SURVIVORio Discord⬇️ https:// discord. gg/ survivorio * Show More 6:11 Diving bell boat: Walking down to the Rhine's riverbed The diving bell boat "Carl Straat" patrols the stretch between Alsace and the Netherlands.... published: 02 Sep 2021 Play in Full Screen Diving bell boat: Walking down to the Rhine's riverbed DIVING BELL BOAT: WALKING DOWN TO THE RHINE'S RIVERBED * Report rights infringement * published: 02 Sep 2021 * views: 540440 The diving bell boat "Carl Straat" patrols the stretch between Alsace and the Netherlands. Captain Thomas Bach keeps the riverbed clean. His ship features a steel diving bell that can be lowered, using overpressure to displace the water at the bottom of the Rhine. He can then stay dry while working below the water; retrieving lost anchors, for example. For the crew, it is a seven-meter descent via the shaft pipe to the bottom of the Rhine. There they have to work in very harsh conditions, from compressed air to extreme heat in summer and cold in winter. Excerpt from the documentary series "The Rhine From Above". Click here to watch all episodes: http:// bit. ly/ RhineFromAbove © 2014, Licensed by vidicom * Show More 13:34 Mariana Trench | In Pursuit of the Abyss The depths of the Mariana Trench conceal many peculiar creatures. This deep sea film is sp... published: 22 Jun 2021 Play in Full Screen Mariana Trench | In Pursuit of the Abyss MARIANA TRENCH | IN PURSUIT OF THE ABYSS * Report rights infringement * published: 22 Jun 2021 * views: 20310552 The depths of the Mariana Trench conceal many peculiar creatures. This deep sea film is sponsored by NordVPN. Go to https:// nordvpn. com/ naturalworldfacts or use code naturalworldfacts to get a 2-year plan plus a bonus gift with a huge discount. Check out the NordVPN YouTube channel here: https:// www. youtube. com/ watch? v=yCWNR... The Mariana Trench sits like a crescent-shaped dent in the floor of the Pacific. A 2,550 km long, 69 km wide fracture that plummets down into a pure black void of the Hadal Zone. At the bottom, it hosts the deepest known location on Earth. The Challenger Deep, 11,033 metres or 36,200 feet beneath the waves. The trench itself is but one part of a global network of deep scars that cut across the ocean floor. Features that formed from a process called subduction. In the case of the Mariana Trench, the western edge of the Pacific Plate was thrust beneath the smaller Mariana Plate to the west, creating the deep fracture. Molten material then rose through volcanoes near the trench, building the nearby Mariana Islands. 00:00 - Introduction 01:18 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - How the Trench Formed 02:41 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - An 'Impossible' Frontier 03:40 - Chapter 1: Gates of the Underworld - The HMS Challenger 04:11 - Chapter 2: In Pursuit of the Abyss - The Bathyscape Trieste, 1960 05:51 - Chapter 2: In Pursuit of the Abyss - The Deepsea Challenge, 2012 06:38 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Kaiko Mission 07:56 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Hadal Amphipod 09:00 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - Abyssal Sea Cucumbers 09:45 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - The Mariana Snailfish 10:17 - Chapter 3: Discoveries in the Dark - Denizens of the Abyss 11:05 - Conclusion CHECK OUT OUR DEEP SEA WEBSITE: https:// naturalworldfacts. com/ deep-se... I do not own any of the footage. I write the script, narrate, and edit what footage I can find, which is allowed due to YouTube's 'Fair Use' policy. Footage used is from various YouTube sources, MBARI, NatGeo, the Ocean Exploration Institute and the Schmidt Ocean Institute, as well as other sources. Music Used: Blue Danube by Strauss Bach Cello Suite No. 1, G Major, Predule, performed by Cooper Cannell Always (Hebridean Mix) by Jessica Curry This Godforsaken Aerial by Jessica Curry Ode to Joy performed by Cooper Cannell #deepsea #wildlife #nature #documentary #ocean #marinebiology #science #biology Resources: http:// awesomeocean. com/ top-stories/ 8... http:// www. deepseachallenge. com/ the-e... * Show More 11:14 Exploring Life on the Deep Sea Floor Deep sea life must choose whether to live on the bottom, or to brave the expansive open oc... published: 16 Feb 2021 Play in Full Screen Exploring Life on the Deep Sea Floor EXPLORING LIFE ON THE DEEP SEA FLOOR * Report rights infringement * published: 16 Feb 2021 * views: 303149 Deep sea life must choose whether to live on the bottom, or to brave the expansive open ocean of the midwater zone. Creatures that adapt to life in the midwater zone are known as pelagic, while creatures that evolve to be well-suited to an existence on or near the sea floor, are known as benthic or demersal. These two groups could not be more different, but which is a more effective way of life? First, let’s take a look at the demersal creatures of the deep - the bottom-feeders, clinging to rocky seamounts, and burrowing into the mud. We will begin our investigation in the shallows, and follow the ever-deepening sea-floor down to the far depths of the deep ocean. The diversity of organisms that are adapted to life near the bottom of the deep sea is immense - and far greater than that of pelagic organisms. Life thrives on every part of the ocean floor, from near-shore ecosystems, all the way to the abyss. But the deeper you go, the stranger they become. Part 2 | Pelagic Deep Sea Life: https:// youtu. be/ FqHSZ23x1LE DEEP SEA HUB: https:// naturalworldfacts. com/ deep-sea-hub 00:00 - Introduction: Pelagic and Demersal Life 00:55 - Part 1: Demersal Creatures of the Deep 01:10 - The Diversity of Benthic Life 01:43 - The Life of Coral Reefs 02:15 - Life at the Continental Shelf 02:29 - Cold-water Coral and Sponge Gardens 03:07 - Life on the Abyssal Plain 03:29 - Advantages of Living on the Sea Floor 03:48 - The Sea-Floor Nutrient Cycle 04:09 - Why Benthic Life is so Abundant 04:45 - The Extent of the Abyssal Plain 05:00 - Deep Sea Infauna and Epifauna 05:26 - The Role of Benthic Life in the Ecosystem 05:53 - Ancient Crinoids of the Deep Sea 06:32 - Benthic Fish of the Deep Sea 07:07 - Limitations of Life on the Sea Floor 07:25 - Seamounts Explained 07:49 - Why Seamounts are Biological Hotspots 08:05 - Life at Cold-Water Reefs 08:31 - Life at Deep Sea Brine Pools 09:04 - Life at Hydrothermal Vents 09:31 - Life at the Bottom of the Mariana Trench 09:53 - The Mariana Snailfish 10:08 - Conclusion: Living on the Sea-floor is an Advantage 10:46 - The Deep Sea Hub Footage used belongs to Schmidt Ocean Institute, MBARI, OceanX and the Ocean Exploration Institute. #deepsea #wildlife #nature #documentary #ocean #marinebiology #science #biology Music Used: Away - Patrick Patrikios Feels - Patrick Patrikios Simple - Patrick Patrikios Prism - Bobby Richards Strange the Dreamer - Savfk Resources: https:// www. marine. usf. edu/ pjocean/ packets/ f98/ f98u3le3. pdf * Show More 5:10 The Deepest Dive in Antarctica Reveals a Sea Floor Teeming With Life http:// www. oceanx. org http:// www. instagram. com/ oceanx http:// www. facebook. com/ oceanxorg ht... published: 16 Mar 2018 Play in Full Screen The Deepest Dive in Antarctica Reveals a Sea Floor Teeming With Life THE DEEPEST DIVE IN ANTARCTICA REVEALS A SEA FLOOR TEEMING WITH LIFE * Report rights infringement * published: 16 Mar 2018 * views: 17116168 http:// www. oceanx. org http:// www. instagram. com/ oceanx http:// www. facebook. com/ oceanxorg http:// www. twitter. com/ oceanx No one really knows what’s in the deep ocean in Antarctica. Now we have the technology to reach into the ocean depths, we accompanied scientist and deep-sea explorer Jon Copley and became the first to descend to 1000 meters underwater in Antarctica for Blue Planet II. The exotic creatures we found there will astonish you. This video is a part of Our Blue Planet, a joint venture between OceanX and BBC Earth to get people talking about the ocean. Join the conversation on Twitter: @OurBluePlanet. #oceanx #alucia #antarctica #submarines Director: Mark Dalio Director of Photography (AP): Janssen Powers Director of Photography (BBC): Ted Giffords 2nd Camera/Drone Op: James DuBourdieu Field Audio: Mike Kasic Production Manager: Samantha Loshiavo Associate Producer: Marjorie Crowley Digital Producer: Erika Jarvis Editors: Ryan Quinn, Brian Golding, Janssen Powers Colorist: James DuBourdieu Sound Re-recording Mixer: Ryan Quinn Assistant Editor: Jorge Alvarez Post Production Supervisor: Brian Golding Executive Producer: Jennifer Hile * Show More 17:38 THE MOST HORRIFYING PLACES IN THE OCEAN 11,034 m BELOW SEA LEVEL Subscribe to my channel - http:// bit. ly/ ReYOUniverse The world's oceans are so underexplo... published: 19 Jun 2022 Play in Full Screen THE MOST HORRIFYING PLACES IN THE OCEAN 11,034 m BELOW SEA LEVEL THE MOST HORRIFYING PLACES IN THE OCEAN 11,034 M BELOW SEA LEVEL * Report rights infringement * published: 19 Jun 2022 * views: 5586728 Subscribe to my channel - http:// bit. ly/ ReYOUniverse The world's oceans are so underexplored that if you dive deeper than 3,500 meters, there's a good chance to discover a new species unknown to science. There's also a good chance you'll find debris and garbage. Oceans cover more than 70% of the Earth's surface. The average depth of the oceans is about 3.7 kilometers, and since light can only penetrate to a depth of 100 meters, darkness reigns deeper underwater. Let’s push this statement one step further and conclude that since most of the planet is covered by water, it means that most of the Earth exists in total darkness. Water in the oceans account for almost 96% of the Earth's water. The portion of fresh water compared to seawater is so small that if the fresh water that flows into the ocean is spread over the surface of the ocean, it would have been about 1.25 meters thick. According to the U.S. Journal of Science and Engineering, 94% of all life on Earth lives in water. It means that all of us who live on land belong to a very, very small minority. So what mysteries lurk in the depths of the oceans? The deeper we go, the more curious it gets. It seems we know more about the surface of Mars than about the ocean floor of our planet. What's going on in the deepest places, we didn't know at all, at least until recently. Lack of light and extreme pressure makes this part of the ocean difficult to explore. Today we're going on a journey into the very depths. We're going to find out what the bottom of the ocean looks like, what it consists of and what happens there. Who knows what we will find there… We are going to dive deep to the places with most elien conditions! What was found in the deepest places of the ocean? #marianatrench #ocean #reyouniverse * Show More 3:15 Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration (Global seas) 9/Aug/2024 Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration. #submarine #BoatyMcBoatface ... published: 09 Aug 2024 Play in Full Screen Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration (Global seas) 9/Aug/2024 BOATY MCBOATFACE SUBMARINE COMPLETES TWO MONTHS EXPLORATION (GLOBAL SEAS) 9/AUG/2024 * Report rights infringement * published: 09 Aug 2024 * views: 72 Boaty McBoatface submarine completes two months exploration. #submarine #BoatyMcBoatface There are earlier reports on this ship (name, etc.) on this channel here: https:// youtu. be/ yVI6yDeq_ MQ * Show More 14:49 The deep ocean is the final frontier on planet Earth Watch the latest in the Ocean series - How to stop plastics getting into the ocean: https:... published: 23 Mar 2017 Play in Full Screen The deep ocean is the final frontier on planet Earth THE DEEP OCEAN IS THE FINAL FRONTIER ON PLANET EARTH * Report rights infringement * published: 23 Mar 2017 * views: 6215337 Watch the latest in the Ocean series - How to stop plastics getting into the ocean: https:// youtu. be/ D7EdgCxFZ8Q The ocean covers 70% of our planet. The deep-sea floor is a realm that is largely unexplored, but cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to go deeper than ever before. Click here to subscribe to The Economist on YouTube: http:// econ. trib. al/ rWl91R7 Beneath the waves is a mysterious world that takes up to 95% of Earth's living space. Only three people have ever reached the bottom of the deepest part of the ocean. The deep is a world without sunlight, of freezing temperatures, and immense pressure. It's remained largely unexplored until now. Cutting-edge technology is enabling a new generation of aquanauts to explore deeper than ever before. They are opening up a whole new world of potential benefits to humanity. The risks are great, but the rewards could be greater. From a vast wealth of resources to clues about the origins of life, the race is on to the final frontier The Okeanos Explorer, the American government state-of-the-art vessel, designed for every type of deep ocean exploration from discovering new species to investigating shipwrecks. On board, engineers and scientists come together to answer questions about the origins of life and human history. Today the Okeanos is on a mission to investigate the wreck of a World War one submarine. Engineer Bobby Moore is part of a team who has developed the technology for this type of mission. The “deep discover”, a remote operating vehicle is equipped with 20 powerful LED lights and designed to withstand the huge pressure four miles down. Equivalent to 50 jumbo jets stacked on top of a person While the crew of the Okeanos send robots to investigate the deep, some of their fellow scientists prefer a more hands-on approach. Doctor Greg stone is a world leading marine biologist with over 8,000 hours under the sea. He has been exploring the abyss in person for 30 years. The technology opening up the deep is also opening up opportunity. Not just to witness the diversity of life but to glimpse vast amounts of rare mineral resources. Some of the world's most valuable metals can be found deep under the waves. A discovery that has begun to pique the interest of the global mining industry. The boldest of mining companies are heading to the deep drawn by the allure of a new Gold Rush. But to exploit it they're also beating a path to another strange new world. In an industrial estate in the north of England, SMD is one of the world's leading manufacturers of remote underwater equipment. The industrial technology the company has developed has made mining possible several kilometers beneath the ocean surface. With an estimated 150 trillion dollars’ worth of gold alone, deep-sea mining has the potential to transform the global economy. With so much still to discover, mining in the deep ocean could have unknowable impact. It's not just life today that may need protecting; reaching the deep ocean might just allow researchers to answer some truly fundamental questions. Hydrothermal vents, hot springs on the ocean floor, are cracks in the Earth's crust. Some claim they could help scientists glimpse the origins of life itself. We might still be years away from unlocking the mysteries of the deep. Even with the latest technology, this kind of exploration is always challenging. As the crew of the Okeanos comes to terms with a scale of the challenge and the opportunity that lies beneath, what they and others discover could transform humanity's understanding of how to protect the ocean. It's the most hostile environment on earth, but the keys to our future may lie in the deep. Check out Economist Films: http:// films. economist. com/ Check out The Economist’s full video catalogue: http:// econ. st/ 20IehQk Like The Economist on Facebook: https:// www. facebook. com/ TheEconomist/ Follow The Economist on Twitter: https:// twitter. com/ theeconomist Follow us on Instagram: https:// www. instagram. com/ theeconomist/ Follow us on LINE: http:// econ. st/ 1WXkOo6 Follow us on Medium: https:// medium. com/@ the_ economist * Show More EXPLORATION Exploration is the act of searching for the purpose of discovery of information or resources. Exploration occurs in all non-sessile animal species, including humans. In human history, its most dramatic rise was during the Age of Discovery when European explorers sailed and charted much of the rest of the world for a variety of reasons. Since then, major explorations after the Age of Discovery have occurred for reasons mostly aimed at information discovery. In scientific research, exploration is one of three purposes of empirical research (the other two being description and explanation). The term is commonly used metaphorically. For example, an individual may speak of exploring the Internet, sexuality, etc. NOTABLE PERIODS OF HUMAN EXPLORATION PHOENICIAN GALLEY SAILINGS The Phoenicians (1550 BCE–300 BCE) traded throughout the Mediterranean Sea and Asia Minor though many of their routes are still unknown today. The presence of tin in some Phoenician artifacts suggests that they may have traveled to Britain. Some scientists speculate that they voyaged all the way to Central America, although this is disputed. According to Virgil's Aeneid and other ancient sources, the legendary Queen Dido was a Phoenician from Asia Minor who sailed to North Africa and founded the city of Carthage. Read more This page contains text from Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia - https://wn.com/Exploration <li class="playlistitemli thumbnail"> <a class="playlistitem" id="<%= id %>"> <div class="thumb"> <div class="clip"> <div class="thumb_play"></div> <img alt="<%= title %>" src="<%= thumbnailUrl %>" /> <div class="duration opacity"><%= durationStr %></div> </div> </div> <div class="video-title"><%= title %></div> </a> <span class="playlistitemremove TTip"><span>remove from playlist</span><i class="fa fa-trash" aria-hidden="true"></i></span> <a class="share-popup TTip" title="<%= title %>" onclick="return share_popup(this, this.title)" href="javascript: void(0);"><span>share this video</span><i class="fa fa-share" aria-hidden="true"></i></a> <div class="buttons"></div> <span class="description-content" style="display:none;"><%= tooltipContentBody %></span> </li> <li class="playlistitemli list"><div class="item"> <a class="playlistitem ellipsis" id="<%= id %>" href="javascript:void(0);"> <span class="title"><%= title %></span>...</a> <span class="playlistitemremove TTip" title="remove from playlist"></span> <a class="share-popup TTip" title="<%= title %>" onclick="return share_popup(this, this.title)" href="javascript: void(0);"><span><i></i>share</span></a> <span class="duration"><%= durationStr %></span> <span class="description-content" style="display:none;"><%= tooltipContentBody %></span> </div></li> VISUALIZING DEEP-SEA MINING... THE RACE TO MINE THE BOTTOM OF THE OCEAN... GET MORE JELLYFISH, FLASHLIGHTS & KEGS FROM AUTUMN... DIVING BELL BOAT: WALKING DOWN TO THE RHINE'S RIVE... MARIANA TRENCH | IN PURSUIT OF THE ABYSS... EXPLORING LIFE ON THE DEEP SEA FLOOR... THE DEEPEST DIVE IN ANTARCTICA REVEALS A SEA FLOOR... THE MOST HORRIFYING PLACES IN THE OCEAN 11,034 M B... BOATY MCBOATFACE SUBMARINE COMPLETES TWO MONTHS EX... THE DEEP OCEAN IS THE FINAL FRONTIER ON PLANET EAR... LATEST NEWS FOR: SEABED EXPLORATION Edit CAPITALISE ON GLOBAL SURGE IN DEEP-SEA EXPLORATION, OYETOLA TELLS NIGERIANS * * This Day 18 Sep 2024 And, this workshop aims to raise awareness among critical stakeholders about the importance of deep seabed exploration and exploitation, addressing environmental and social implications and, ensuring ... Edit LETTER: ‘IT’S TIME WE LISTENED TO THE SCIENCE’ * * Cook Islands News 18 Sep 2024 I write with a heavy heart, disappointed by the narrow-mindedness I see in some of my fellow Cook Islanders when it comes to seabed minerals exploration ... Seabed Minerals Authority wouldn’t even exist. Edit “STOCKS UNDER $1 GAINING MOMENTUM: WBUY, KAVL, OMEX, PRTG, RJDG – DRIVING INNOVATION, MARKET TRENDS, ... * * GetNews 18 Sep 2024 · Odyssey Marine Exploration Inc ... is making headlines with its recent discoveries and high-value seabed assets. As a leader in deep-sea mineral exploration, OMEX offers investors a rare opportunity to tap into untapped marine resources. Edit GARMENT PRINTING CAMPAIGN RAISES AWARENESS AGAINST DEEP-SEA MINING * * Cook Islands News 10 Sep 2024 The Seabed ... “Until such time, only exploration activities are allowed. Exploration research is critical in generating the science needed to make informed decisions about seabed minerals development.”. Edit GLOBAL STUDY SHOWS DEMERSAL FISHING AFFECTS OCEAN FLOOR CARBON STORAGE * * Phys Dot Org 05 Sep 2024 ... analyzed the findings of 71 independent studies to create a global database that harmonizes existing knowledge to explore the complex relationship between demersal fishing and seabed carbon. Edit ISRAEL COMPLIED WITH UN RESOLUTIONS; PEACE NEVER CAME * * Daily Alert 05 Sep 2024 In May 2000, Israel left Lebanon. In June of that year, the UN certified that Israel had met the requirements of Resolution 425 ... In 2022, Hizbullah demanded that Israel agree to allow Lebanon to explore the maritime border's seabed for gas ... 7. On Oct. Edit PACIFIC CABLES REQUIRE PROTECTION * * Taipei Times 05 Sep 2024 The seabed of the Luzon Strait, separating Luzon and Taiwan, and the South China Sea have dense networks of undersea cables ... This can also aid in exploring new routes to avoid already congested ones or sidestep marine biodiversity hotspots. Edit PM BROWN URGES PACIFIC UNITY ON DEEP-SEA MINING * * Cook Islands News 03 Sep 2024 The meeting, which will bring together leaders and ministers from across the Pacific, aims to address the contentious issue of seabed mineral extraction and its implications for the region’s marine environment. Edit UNDERWATER ARCHAEOLOGISTS DISCOVER ANCIENT DAGGER ON SEABED * * Heritage Daily 03 Sep 2024 Since 2019, an excavation project, led by Assoc. Prof. Dr. Hakan Öniz from Akdeniz University’s Fine Arts Faculty, has been exploring the seabed off the coast of Kumluca in Turkey’s southern province of Antalya ... Image Credit ... Sources . Edit 6.1-MAGNITUDE EARTHQUAKE STRIKES OFF KAMCHATKA COAST, NO TSUNAMI THREAT * * Xinhua 30 Aug 2024 VLADIVOSTOK, Aug ... The epicenter of the quake was located approximately 126 km from the city of Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky, at a depth of around 27 km beneath the seabed. ■. EXPLORE XINHUANET. News. In-depthSportsBusinessCultureWorldChina Regions ... . Edit AT LEAST TWO COMPANIES SEEK NORWAY SEABED MINING PERMITS * * Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide 24 May 2024 Two companies said on Wednesday they are seeking offshore seabed ... Edit NORWAY SUED OVER DEEP-SEA MINING PLANS * * The Observer 23 May 2024 One of the world’s biggest environmental groups is suing the Norwegian government for opening up its seabed for deep-sea mining, claiming that Norway has failed to properly investigate the consequences of this move. Edit TRADITIONAL CHANTS AND LANGUAGES GET A BOOST FROM LOCAL ARTS TRUST * * Cook Islands News 23 May 2024 This project focuses on the preservation of Pukapuka’s traditional chants and songs ... Te Rito O Taku Peu Tupuna was established in 2020 and is funded by CIC Ocean Research, a Cook Islands-based seabed minerals exploration company .... Edit INDIA & CHINA COMPETE FOR SEABED MINERALS CRITICAL TO EVS & SOLAR PANELS * * MENA FN 21 May 2024 (MENAFN - KNN India) New Delhi, May 21 (KNN) India and China are engaged in an underwater exploration race to secure access to critical mineral resources found on the seabeds of the Indian ... . Edit SCOTLAND’S VULNERABLE MARINE LIFE NOT PROPERLY PROTECTED, CAMPAIGNERS WARN * * The Observer 20 May 2024 They cite the government’s own seabed surveys and expert evidence about the damage from trawlers such as scallop dredgers fishing inside marine protection areas (MPAs) that Scotland designated in 2014. * 1 * 2 * Next page » ARTICLE SEARCH search tools You can search using any combination of the items listed below. 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