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A deep-sea training and engineering dive off the coast of San Diego provided an opportunity for never-before-seen imagery of the U.S. Navy submarine USS F-1, lost at sea in an accident on December ...
A deep-sea training and engineering dive off the coast of San Diego provided an opportunity for never-before-seen imagery of the U.S. Navy submarine USS F-1, lost at sea in an accident on December ...
With the help of advanced deep-sea imaging technology, researchers were able to capture high-quality images of the submarine’s wreckage, discovered more than 1,300 feet under the ocean’s ...
Scientists used an autonomous underwater vehicle to image previously unexplored, ultra-deep waters near the abyss of the ...
The U.S. push to mine international waters for metals defies global efforts to control and protect these fragile ecosystems.
A groundbreaking study in the journal Science, has unveiled how deep ocean currents—known as global overturning ...
We have visually explored less than 0.001 percent of the deep sea floor. To put that in perspective, 66 percent of the planet is deep ocean, and 99.999 percent of that ocean is unknown to us. Like ...
A new review of ocean data suggests that more than 99.999 percent of the global deep seafloor has never been seen by humans. But what does that really mean? “In scientific papers, some people ...
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