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INVENTOR EYE on MSN9h
Monsters of the Mariana Trench: Encountering the Most Terrifying Ocean CreaturesIn the ocean’s deepest abyss, a world of bizarre and dangerous creatures thrives where sunlight never reaches. The Mariana Trench, a vast expanse stretching 2,500 kilometers with depths plunging over ...
The U.S. push to mine international waters for metals defies global efforts to control and protect these fragile ecosystems.
A Japanese torpedo slammed into the USS New Orleans in 1942, tearing off nearly one-third of the ship and killing over 180 ...
In the South China Sea, off China’s Hainan Island, researchers dropped the carcass of a cow about 5,340 feet down to the ...
How a professional ship-sinker is about to turn a famous ocean liner into the world’s largest artificial reef The SS United ...
An underwater volcano near Tonga revealed how sediment spreads, disrupts marine life, and raises questions about deep-sea ...
Marine robotics company Ocean Infinity has successfully launched its NeedleFish USV at an official event with the Kuwaiti ...
New York Post on MSN15h
Long-lost bow of WWII ship found nearly 83 years after it was blown off in Japanese torpedo strikeTo find the bow of this ship is an opportunity to remember the sacrifice of this valiant crew, even on one of the worst nights in U.S. Navy history.” ...
Regtechtimes on MSN10h
China’s sub-sea superweapon: The $69M threat to underwater data cablesA new deep-sea device developed by China has caught the world’s attention. The China Ship Scientific Research Centre (CSSRC) ...
For this research, Utrecht master student Sophie ten Hietbrink worked for four weeks aboard the research vessel RV Pelagia. On a trip from the Azores to the continental shelf of Europe, she took water ...
On a dark night with no moon and heavily overcast skies on Nov. 30, 1942, the USS New Orleans was one of 11 cruisers and ...
22h
Military Times on MSNUndersea expedition discovers bow of USS New Orleans, lost in WWIIOn Nov. 30, 1942, a torpedo sank the heavy cruiser New Orleans, sending it to the bottom of the Pacific. Its whereabouts were lost to history — until now.
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