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Mariana Trench
Mariana
Trench location
This article is about the geographical
feature. For the Canadian pop-punk band,
see Marianas Trench (band).
The Mariana Trench (or Marianas Trench)
is the deepest known submarine trench,
with a maximum depth of about 11 km (6.8
miles), and the deepest location on the
surface of the Earth's crust.
It is located in the floor of the
western North Pacific Ocean, to the east
and south of the Mariana Islands at
11°21′N, 142°12′E, near Guam.
The trench is the boundary where two
tectonic plates meet, where the Pacific
Plate is being subducted under the
Philippine Plate. The bottom of the
trench is farther below sea level than
Mount Everest is above it. At the
bottom, water exerts a pressure of 108.6
MPa, over one thousand times the
standard atmospheric pressure at sea
level.
Exploration
The trench was first surveyed in 1951 by
the Royal Navy vessel Challenger, which
gave its name to the deepest part of the
trench, the Challenger Deep. Using echo
sounding, the Challenger II measured a
depth of 5 960 fathoms (10 900 metres,
35 760 ft) at 11°19′N, 142°15′E
In 1957, the Soviet vessel Vityaz
reported a depth of 11 034 meters (36
200 ft), dubbed the Mariana Hollow.

January 23, 1960:
Trieste just before the dive:
In an unprecedented dive, the United
States Navy bathyscaphe Trieste reached
the bottom at 1:06 p.m. on January 23,
1960, with U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don
Walsh and Jacques Piccard on board. Iron
shot was used for ballast, with gasoline
for buoyancy. The onboard systems
indicated a depth of 11 521 meters (37
799 ft), but this was later revised to
10 916 meters (35 813 ft). At the
bottom, Walsh and Piccard were surprised
to discover soles or flounder about 30
cm (1 ft) long, as well as shrimp.
According to Piccard, "The bottom
appeared light and clear, a waste of
firm diatomaceous ooze".
In 1962, the M.V. Spencer F. Baird
recorded a greatest depth of 10 915
meters (35 810 ft). In 1984, the
Japanese sent the Takuyō, a highly
specialized survey vessel, to the
Mariana Trench and collected data using
a narrow, multi-beam echo sounder; they
reported a maximum depth of 10 924
metres, also reported as 10 920 meters ±
10 meters). The most accurate
measurement on record was taken by a
Japanese probe, Kaikō, which descended
unmanned to the bottom of the trench on
March 24, 1995 and recorded a depth of
10 911 meters (35 798 ft).
The Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
is planning to send its Nereus hybrid
remotely operated vehicle (HROV) to
explore the trench in 2007 or 2008.
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