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Spartacus
MemberOvomorphMar-12-2012 9:43 AMWASHINGTON — Canadian director James Cameron will try in the coming weeks to dive to the deepest place on Earth, further than any other human has on a solo mission, to return with specimens and images.
Cameron would seek to accomplish his feat aboard a submersible "as futuristic as anything in his movies," the National Geographic scientific institution, which has partnered with the Canadian filmmaker for the Deepsea Challenge project, said Thursday.
During testing off Papua New Guinea on Tuesday, Cameron of "Avatar" and "Abyss" fame dived deeper than any other human has on a solo mission at a record-breaking 5.1 miles (8.2 kilometers), according to National Geographic.
His goal is to become the first human to visit the Mariana Trench's Challenger Deep, which plummets 6.8 miles (11 kilometers) down in the Pacific Ocean, for more than 50 years, and bring back data and specimens.
National Geographic said the mission would "expand our knowledge and understanding of these largely unknown parts of the planet."
Cameron acknowledged some concerns ahead of his journey.
"When you're making a movie, everybody's read the script and they know what's going to happen next," said Cameron.
"When you're on an expedition, nature hasn't read the script, the ocean hasn't read the script, and no one knows what's going to happen next."
In 1960, a two-person crew aboard the U.S. Navy submersible Trieste — the only humans to have reached Challenger Deep — spent just 20 minutes on the bottom, but their view was obscured by silt stirred up when they landed.
The Cameron-designed sub, however, is expected to allow the director to spend around six hours on the seafloor during which he plans to collect samples and film his journey with several 3-D, high-definition cameras and an eight-foot-tall (2.4-meter-tall) array of LED lights.
The Deepsea Challenger, which can sink upright, is 26 feet (eight meters) tall and took eight years to build. It uses specially designed foam to allow the new sub to weigh just 12 tonnes, about 12 times lighter than Trieste.
Cameron, 57, said he hopes his expedition will reveal more about ocean trenches, such as whether fish can live so deep in the sea.
But he will be crammed into a 43-inch-wide (109-centimeter-wide) steel "pilot sphere" on his way down in which he won't be able to extend his arms or legs.
"It's like a clown car in there," Cameron said in a video statement. "You barely have room to get in, and then they hand you another 50 pounds (23 kilograms) of equipment."
Because of the extreme depth of Challenger Deep, it is cloaked in perpetual darkness and surrounded with near-freezing waters.
"The deep trenches are the last unexplored frontier on our planet," National Geographic said.
On the sea floor, Cameron's sub will experience water pressures approaching 16,000 pounds per square inch.
Cameron is not alone in seeking to beat the diving record.
British magnate Richard Branson has built a two-seater sub he says can survive a Challenger Deep descent. And last year, the Triton submersible company unveiled the Triton 36000/3 model, which would reportedly allow a three-person crew to make the journey.
The public can follow Cameron's expedition at www.deepseachallenge.com.
13 Replies

Spartacus
MemberOvomorphMar-12-2012 1:28 PMI thought you might be interested in this Snorky, and everyone else too...it's very cool stuff.

Gavin
MemberTrilobiteMar-12-2012 1:31 PMYeah, I just read it Sparky.
Jim is a serious nut when it comes to the deep sea, and yet he as never done a film with an underwater domed city, go figure.

Spartacus
MemberOvomorphMar-12-2012 1:34 PMI find it cool that there may be just as many things, or close to that, of interest and as yet undiscovered in our world, and that lie beneath our surfaces rather than above them.

Gavin
MemberTrilobiteMar-12-2012 1:40 PMI agree...
Look at Octopi and Squids, we consider them alien in nature despite the fact that they are one of the oldest species on earth (Ammonites).
Then you've got the Coelcanth, believed to be extinct for millions of years until an Indian fisherman caught one.
Arcatoothus, believed for ages to be make believe until one washes up on shore.
The Angler fish, with its own lightbulb lure.
The oceans of our world have a lot more surprises up their watery sleeves, that I can guarantee.

Spartacus
MemberOvomorphMar-12-2012 1:46 PMand I also love them salty anchovies on my Pepperoni & Sausage {Don't even bother I am Heterosexual and proud of it} Pizza, and they come from down there too...I think...YUP...I do...lol....and also for the record my favorite all time book is "One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish" by Dr. Theodore Zeisel Seuss {and that's his REAL name by the way}

Gavin
MemberTrilobiteMar-12-2012 1:52 PMMy favourite book is Divine Comedy, but there you go.
I do share Jim's passion with the wonder of the oceans, except I suffer terribly with sea-sickness.

Spartacus
MemberOvomorphMar-12-2012 2:07 PMWow heavy duty stuff Snorky check this out, 2 years ago I went on a Huge Fishing trip with 2 buddies. We did this in one of the filthiest nastiest bodies of water on earth maybe, The Lachine Canal In Montreal, Quebec. So for 5 hours no one cathes anything due to inclement weather and windy conditions. At the end of the trip as we're trolling our way home...It starts to pour...and the water got very rocky and wavy, and I got nauscious, sea sick for thr first time in my life...but the thing of it was...I had also decided earlier that there was no way I was coming home empty handed. Despite the fact I wanted to puke I knew the trip was ending and I was out of time, so i did the ONLY thng left out of desperation. Despite my nausia, I opened a can of Smoked Oysters and out of the entire can I mananged to get just 2 of these slippery smoky critters to stick to the hook and not fall apart in pieces {smoked Oysters are delicate}. and then under severe objections from my stomac I threw the line in the water and as we approached the 500 yard marker from port... I lifeted the ine up and there was a 5 1/2 pound small mouth Bass Stuck to the end of my Rod...it's the ONLY fish I ever caught on my own, and although very tiny, I can say with PRIDE, I caught him with a Smoked Oyster! LMFAO... And I have a pic somewhere!!! By the way I lied about my favorite book... I Love reading and like lots of books but the one I enjoyed the most in this life so far, blieve it or not, was the Autobiography "AGASSI" written by Andre Agassi and his agent !!!

Gavin
MemberTrilobiteMar-12-2012 2:14 PMI don't get fishing, i find inanely boring.
Fave Book - Divine Comedy
Fave Film - Schindlers List
Fave Music - Trent Reznor
Fave Artist - H. R. Giger
Fave Video Game - Street Fighter
Fave Car - Nissan GTR
Fave Helicopter - Longbow Apache
Fave Food - Garlic

Spartacus
MemberOvomorphMar-12-2012 2:23 PMI don't get fishing, i find inanely boring.
->me too, did it to Party, drink beer and smoke funny cigarettes with friends for 6 days straight
Fave Book - Divine Comedy
-> The "Agassi" Autobiography
Fave Film - Schindlers List
-> "The Ninth Configuration" {William Peter Blatty}
Fave Music - Trent Reznor
->The Black Crowes & Led Zeppelin
Fave Artist - H. R. Giger
-> Tie... Usher & Giger
Fave Video Game - Street Fighter
-> "Dragon's Lair"
Fave Car - Nissan GTR
->Jame's Bond's proto type Austin Martin Turbo
Fave Helicopter - Longbow Apache
->Sikorsky L1011
Fave Food - Garlic
->BBQ Ribs smothered in "Smokin Stampede" BBQ sauce and Garlic !

NCC 1701
Veteran MemberMemberOvomorphMar-12-2012 6:35 PMIt must be Canadian thing,,,,,,, that ->BBQ Ribs smothered in "Smokin Stampede" BBQ
not to mention the funny cigarettes.....Rock on
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