TRANSCRIÇÃOEnglish

Mariana Trench: What China Found In The Deepest Place On Earth

23m 10s3,414 palavras541 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIÇÃO COMPLETA

0:00

The deepest point on Earth sits nearly 7

0:03

mi below the surface of the Pacific

0:05

Ocean. It is darker than any cave,

0:08

colder than most freezers, and the

0:10

pressure down there is strong enough to

0:12

crush a steel car like a soda can. For

0:15

most of human history, we had no idea

0:18

what was down there. And for a long

0:20

time, most scientists believed nothing

0:23

could survive it. Then China went down.

0:26

Not once, not twice, but dozens of

0:29

times. And what they pulled back up from

0:32

that darkness stunned the entire

0:34

scientific world. More than 7,000

0:37

species that no one had ever seen

0:38

before. Forests of creatures swaying in

0:41

water that has never once seen sunlight.

0:44

Life forms using chemistry instead of

0:46

the sun to survive. An evidence that

0:49

this hidden world had been thriving

0:51

quietly, completely unknown to us for

0:54

millions of years. But here is the part

0:57

that will really get you. The

0:59

discoveries China made at the bottom of

1:01

the Mariana Trench are not just about

1:03

the ocean. They are changing the way

1:06

scientists think about life on other

1:08

planets. Here is the full story.

1:12

The deepest place no one could reach.

1:15

The Mariana Trench is a giant crack in

1:18

the floor of the western Pacific Ocean,

1:20

sitting about 200 m southwest of a small

1:23

US island called Guam. It stretches for

1:26

about 1,580

1:28

mi from north to south, which makes it

1:31

longer than the entire width of the

1:32

United States from Chicago to Los

1:34

Angeles. But its length is not the

1:37

point. Its depth is at the very bottom

1:40

of the trench at a spot called

1:42

Challenger Deep. The ocean floor is

1:44

36,037

1:46

ft down. That is 10,984

1:50

m. Or if numbers are not your thing,

1:54

think of it this way. If you took the

1:56

tallest mountain on Earth, Mount

1:58

Everest, and dropped it into the trench,

2:00

the very top of that mountain would

2:02

still be buried more than one mile

2:04

underwater. That is how deep we are

2:06

talking. For most of the 1900s, humans

2:10

had almost no way to get down there. The

2:13

pressure at that depth is over 1,000

2:15

times greater than what we feel at the

2:18

surface. That is roughly 8 tons pressing

2:21

down on every single square in. To put

2:24

that in your hands, literally that is

2:27

the equivalent of having three

2:29

full-sized cars stacked on top of your

2:31

thumbnail. Your body would not last a

2:34

second without some kind of protection

2:36

that no regular vehicle could provide.

2:38

Two men reached the bottom in 1960 using

2:41

a vehicle that was basically a steel

2:43

ball attached to a massive floating tank

2:45

filled with gasoline. They spent 20

2:48

minutes at the bottom, saw a few

2:50

creatures moving slowly across the mud

2:52

and came back up with zero photos and

2:55

zero samples. Just two eyewitness

2:58

accounts and a lot of unanswered

3:00

questions. Then in 2012, filmmaker James

3:04

Cameron went down alone in a specially

3:06

built submarine called the Deep Sea

3:08

Challenger. He had cameras, he had

3:11

sampling equipment, he had modern

3:13

technology that the 1960 team could only

3:16

have dreamed about. And yet, when he

3:18

arrived at the bottom, he described it

3:21

as looking like the surface of the moon.

3:23

flat, gray, eerily still, barely any

3:27

sign of life beyond a few ghostly

3:30

shrimplike creatures drifting near the

3:32

sediment. That was the picture the world

3:34

had of Challenger Deep going into the

3:37

2010s,

3:39

a cold, dark, and largely empty

3:42

wasteland at the bottom of the sea. A

3:45

place so extreme that even with the best

3:48

equipment available, it had only been

3:50

visited by three humans in all of

3:52

recorded history. Most scientists

3:55

assumed that whatever secrets it held

3:57

were simply too deep, too dark, and too

4:00

hostile to ever be properly understood.

4:04

China was about to change that picture

4:06

completely.

4:08

China decides to go deep.

4:11

In the early 2000s, China made a

4:14

decision that most countries were not

4:16

thinking about. While a lot of the

4:18

world's scientific attention was pointed

4:20

upward at outer space, China turned its

4:24

focus toward inner space, the deep

4:26

ocean, specifically the places so far

4:30

below the surface that sunlight cannot

4:32

reach. Pressure can crush metal, and

4:35

most of the creatures living there do

4:37

not even have names yet. In 2002, China

4:41

launched an ambitious national program

4:43

with one clear goal. Build a manned

4:46

submersible that could reach depths of

4:48

7,000 meters and bring back real

4:51

scientific data. A submersible is

4:53

basically a small underwater vehicle

4:56

built to survive extreme pressure.

4:58

Building one that could go that deep was

5:01

not just an engineering challenge. It

5:03

was more like solving a puzzle where

5:06

every single wrong piece could get

5:08

someone killed. The hull had to be

5:10

strong enough to resist pressure that

5:12

would crumple ordinary steel. The

5:15

electronics had to function in near

5:17

freezing temperatures. The life support

5:19

systems had to keep a crew alive for

5:21

hours with no connection to the surface.

5:24

The first result of that program was a

5:26

submersible called the Gaolong, which

5:29

means sea dragon in Chinese. It took

5:32

nearly a decade to design, build, and

5:35

test. Engineers ran hundreds of

5:37

simulations. They tested materials that

5:40

had never been used in underwater

5:42

vehicles before. They rebuilt components

5:45

that failed and tested them again until

5:47

the numbers were right. In 2012, after

5:51

all that work, the Jaolong reached a

5:53

depth of 7,062 m in the Mariana Trench.

5:57

That made it the deepest diving manned

5:59

submersible in the world at that time,

6:02

overtaking vehicles from the United

6:04

States, Japan, France, and Russia in a

6:07

single dive. But China did not stop

6:10

there. That is the part of this story

6:13

that most people outside of the

6:15

scientific community do not know. The

6:18

Jaolong was not the destination. It was

6:21

the starting point. Over the next

6:23

several years, China kept building and

6:26

improving. They designed a second

6:28

submersible called the Shanghai Yongshi,

6:31

which means deep sea warrior. It was

6:34

faster, more reliable, and carried

6:37

better instruments than the Jaoong.

6:39

Scientists used it to explore mid-depth

6:42

ocean trenches and refine the techniques

6:45

they would need for something much more

6:46

ambitious. Then they built the Fendua,

6:50

which means stver. It was designed from

6:53

the ground up to reach the very bottom

6:56

of Challenger Deep and stay there long

6:58

enough to do serious science. Not 20

7:01

minutes, not 3 hours. Real extended

7:06

methodical exploration. It was fitted

7:09

with highdefinition cameras, robotic

7:11

sampling arms, water collection tools,

7:14

and instruments that could measure

7:16

temperature, chemistry, and biological

7:19

activity on the seafloor in real time.

7:22

China had gone from having no deep sea

7:25

submersible program at all to building

7:27

three generations of increasingly

7:29

capable vehicles in less than 20 years.

7:32

And now, the Striver was ready to go all

7:34

the way down.

7:36

The Strivever reaches the bottom of the

7:38

world.

7:40

On November 10th, 2020, the Fendu

7:44

descended to 10,99

7:47

m in the Challenger Deep that placed it

7:50

among the deepest crude dives ever

7:52

recorded on Earth. Three crew members

7:54

sat inside a titanium sphere roughly the

7:57

size of a small bathroom, sealed off

8:00

from the outside world, while the

8:01

vehicle sank through total darkness for

8:04

about 4 hours. Think about what that

8:06

actually feels like. 4 hours of descent.

8:10

The ocean outside getting heavier and

8:12

colder with every passing minute. No

8:14

sunlight, no radio signal, no way to

8:17

communicate with the surface. Just three

8:20

humans in a titanium ball dropping

8:22

through miles of water that most of the

8:24

planet has never seen and never will.

8:27

And when something goes wrong down

8:29

there, which it can, there is no rescue

8:32

team that can reach you in time. But the

8:34

Fendu was built for exactly this. When

DESBLOQUEAR MAIS

Registe-se gratuitamente para aceder a funcionalidades premium

VISUALIZADOR INTERATIVO

Assista ao vídeo com legendas sincronizadas, sobreposição ajustável e controlo total da reprodução.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

RESUMO DE IA

Obtenha um resumo instantâneo gerado por IA do conteúdo do vídeo, pontos-chave e conclusões.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

TRADUZIR

Traduza a transcrição para mais de 100 idiomas com um clique. Baixe em qualquer formato.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

MAPA MENTAL

Visualize a transcrição como um mapa mental interativo. Entenda a estrutura rapidamente.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

CONVERSAR COM A TRANSCRIÇÃO

Faça perguntas sobre o conteúdo do vídeo. Obtenha respostas com tecnologia de IA diretamente da transcrição.

REGISTE-SE GRATUITAMENTE PARA DESBLOQUEAR

APROVEITE MAIS DE SUAS TRANSCRIÇÕES

Inscreva-se gratuitamente e desbloqueie o visualizador interativo, resumos de IA, traduções, mapas mentais e muito mais. Não é necessário cartão de crédito.

    Mariana Trench: W… - Transcrição Completa | YouTubeTranscript.dev