Victor Vescovo Dives to the Bottom of the Atacama Trench

Underwater explorer Victor Vescovo recently dove to the deepest part of the Atacama Trench off the Chilean coast.

Vescovo did the dive alongside Dr. Osvaldo Ulloa, Director of Chile’s Instituto Milenio de Oceanografia (IMO).

The maximum depth recorded at the Atacama Trench’s lowest point was approximately 8,069 meters (26,473 feet). The new deepest point identified by Vescovo and Ulloa is now an unnamed deep in the Atacama Trench, 77 nautical miles (142.6km) north of the Richards Deep.

This was the first dive in the Chilean leg of the Ring of Fire Part 2 expedition to map the seafloor in the exploration area and collect samples at various depths of the trench.

Vescovo also completed a further dive on January 23rd with Dr. Rudebn Escribano of Chile along the eastern slope of the Richards Deep, the second-deepest location in the Atacama Trench at 7,727 meters (25,351 feet).

Deep Ocean Coral Field at 7100 meters in the Atacama-Trench (Image credit: Caladan Oceanic)
Deep Ocean Coral Field at 7100 meters in the Atacama-Trench (Image credit: Caladan Oceanic)

According to Vescovo:

“It was a great privilege to pilot the first human descent to the bottom of the Atacama Trench with Dr. Ulloa. Being able to glide along the seafloor for three hours, personally investigating interesting points with someone who has studied the area for much of their career, was just fantastic.

“Together we witnessed some amazing evidence of what appears to be more examples of chemosynthesis in the world’s deep ocean trenches. Here, however, we saw long bacterial tendrils coming off of rock faces that never see any sunlight, and obtain their energy from the minerals and gases seeping from the rocks, surrounded by a freezing seawater environment, Just extraordinary.”

While Ulloa added:

“This has been a great day for Chilean science. Thanks to Victor Vescovo and Caladan Oceanic we were able to directly bear witness to the amazing geological and biological richness of the Atacama Trench. Doing exploration at Victor’s side has been a tremendous privilege and rewarding experience, and we are very thankful to him, as well as the entire team of the submersible Limiting Factor and its support vessel Pressure Drop.”

John Lianghttps://www.deeperblue.com/

John Liang is the News Editor at DeeperBlue.com. He first got the diving bug while in High School in Cairo, Egypt, where he earned his PADI Open Water Diver certification in the Red Sea off the Sinai Peninsula. Since then, John has dived in a volcanic lake in Guatemala, among white-tipped sharks off the Pacific Coast of Costa Rica, and other places including a pool in Las Vegas helping to break the world record for the largest underwater press conference.

Note: This article have been indexed to our site. We do not claim legitimacy, ownership or copyright of any of the content above. To see the article at original source Click Here

Related Posts
Where to File a Federal Complaint If Your Airline Refuses to Give You a Refund thumbnail

Where to File a Federal Complaint If Your Airline Refuses to Give You a Refund

Credit: Lubo Ivanko / Shutterstock.com Airlines were hit hard by the CrowdStrike outage last week, which initially resulted in thousands of cancelled flights and many more delays. Unfortunately, Delta passengers are still grappling with travel disruptions—so much so that the Department of Transportation has stepped in to investigate whether consumers' rights are being upheld. If
Read More
Out of This World Archaeological Experiment Lands in Space thumbnail

Out of This World Archaeological Experiment Lands in Space

A world-first – or solar system-first – archaeological project has this week begun on the International Space Station. Led by archaeologists Associate Professor Alice Gorman from Flinders University and Associate Professor Justin Walsh of Chapman University in California, the International Space Station Archaeological Project (ISSAP) is the first archaeological study of a space habitat. “We’re…
Read More
Astronomers point at black holes for dark energy ejection thumbnail

Astronomers point at black holes for dark energy ejection

Astronomers at the University of Michigan could have found evidence linking dark energy—a mysterious energy that drives the exponential expansion of the universe—with black holes. Researchers used measurements by the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) to theorize that dark energy is sourced from black hole production. Despite making up almost 70% of the universe, we
Read More
Bears thumbnail

Bears

(Image credit: OndejChvtal / 500px via Getty Images) There are eight species of bear living around the world today, and many more in the fossil record. "Prehistoric" mummified bears have even been found preserved in permafrost thousands of years after they died. At Live Science, our expert writers and editors bring you the latest news
Read More
Index Of News