Robot Submarine Maps World's Deepest Sinkhole 123
holy_calamity writes "The world's deepest water-filled sinkhole has finally been mapped — by a robotic submarine whose descendants may one day swim on one of Jupiter's moons. The last attempt to find the bottom resulted in the SCUBA diving depth record and the death of a diving legend. The sub's sonar found that the divers had descended to only about 10m from the floor. The sub's mapping also indicated that the sinkhole, which is over 300m deep, could connect to even deeper caves."
Mel's Hole? (Score:5, Funny)
Mel's Hole [wikipedia.org]
Re:Mel's Hole? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Mel's Hole? (Score:4, Insightful)
Are you kidding? Art Bell would descend with his minions claiming "Government Cover-Up" if they deleted it.
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A) It's hilarious.
2) It's a recounting of the guy's tall tales and doesn't seem to allege the truth of the stories. It's thus as valid as many other entries that discuss fables, comic books, etc.
#) It's hilarious. The story of the alternate-universe dimes is reason enough to keep the article in perpetuity!
Re:Mel's Hole? (Score:5, Insightful)
For the same reason that articles on Leprechauns or the Piltdown Man [wikipedia.org] aren't deleted. So someone can go & read about them, find out they're not real things, and the read the story of how the hoax/myth/whatever was perpetutated.
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That's true, but the introductory sentences have the wrong tone. I'm not sure how exactly to fix it, but it sounds too much like something out of Uncyclopedia (or maybe the Onion).
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The gaping hole in that theory, is that the Mel's Hole article doesn't bother to corroborate or contradict any of the evidence offered, even though much of it would be trivially easy to track down... Large checks and non-profits don't just appear and disappear without a paper trail. Not to mention travel records, alibis, etc., etc.
The Piltdown Man article specifical
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Wikipedia's policies on deleting information are ridiculous and stupid. Notability filtering has no place on an online encyclopedia. After the barrage of negative mainstream press articles a few years ago, they really sold out. I guess they just want to be the online equivalent of a paper e
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Sorry, Bobo, but I know its late, but if you RTFA, you'll realize...
Well...
Re:Mel's Hole? (Score:5, Funny)
Solomon
Those bastards (Score:5, Funny)
But shutting down his wombat-rescue operation? That's just plain mean.
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Perhaps his hole was a giant wombat hole. I for one wouldn't want to mess with a three metre wombat. Nothing like that has been seen for 100000 years. I think the Government did the right thing to suppress information about the Hole.
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Hey everybody, I have found a magic speed bump. I'm not gonna tell you where it is, or show you pictures of it, but if you drive over it, you will be able to raise the dead!
I bet if you drive over any speed bump fast enough, the dead will at least jump...
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Re:Mystery Spot (Score:1)
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its descendants? (Score:3, Funny)
Wow, robot submarine sex! I wonder if it has the hots for one of those mars rovers...
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It's Jules Verne! (Score:3, Funny)
So begins the journey to the centre of the earth
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Deep Diving Risks (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Deep Diving Risks (Score:5, Insightful)
Shaw made one serious mistake: he had a plan, and when something went wrong - the corpse's head came off - he tried to modify the plan at 800+ ft below, instead of going up to safety and making a new plan. ( Can't say I would have done better, though )
Re:Deep Diving Risks (Score:5, Insightful)
But I have a hard time crying too much about those stories where someone takes a lot of risks and then dies. Either you're incompetent and in over your head, in which case you deserve whatever you get. Or, you know the risks but take them anyway, figuring a potentially short, but adventure-filled life is better than a long, boring, risk-averse one, in which case you knew exactly what you were getting into, so you can't complain too much. Still, they do make for great reading.
Re:Deep Diving Risks (Score:5, Insightful)
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He wanted the rewards of successfully recovering a body from that depth more than he worried about dying in the attempt and that's a perfectly rational judgement, it is people like this who push boundaries and it's good that they do.
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Or we'd work for NASA. And yes.
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True , but whats that got to do with deep diving? Its not amazing , just pointless and boring.
One thing is certain... (Score:1)
I've pushed many limits, mostly jumping out of reasonably good aircraft. I've also gone big water rafting where death was a real possibility. Been scuba diving in places where I really should not have been (OK, that wasn't co clever). All that time I had no real dependants. I have scars and broken bones to show for my troubles. But I also have experienced life in a way that most people never will.
It is intense like most people cannot imagine. The highs are Huge.... so
Re:One thing is certain... (Score:4, Insightful)
I recently watched a few people get into a flamefest on another site because someone made the comment that "America is tied for first for the highest mortality rate." It was great watching all the "America: Love it or leave it" people come out saying there was no way that was possible and calling the guy a troll and telling him that America was the greatest country so it couldn't be true, etc. None of them seemed to be able to figure out that the guy was saying "everyone dies". : p
Kind of like a poster I saw (Score:1)
30% of people born with this genetic disorder will eventually die.
The corollary I presume is that the remaining 70% are immortal. While I don't want to die any time soon, I think being actually immortal could be a drag.
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I'm a rock climber, kayaker and pilot. I like to push boundaries, but I try to do it with a realistic assessment of my skills and with planning for an out if things should go wrong. Personally, I find that life is much more enjoyable and fulfilling when you challenge yourself.
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As I understood it, it wasn't the head coming off the problem, it was the body being loose instead of stuck, making it hard to put in the bag.
Anyways, that story was creepy.
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Extreme cave diving is not altogether sane i think.
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Holy shit, that is deep.... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Holy shit, that is deep.... (Score:5, Interesting)
With trimix being so accessable now, it doesn't make any sense to me why anyone would continue to endanger themselves by doing deep dives on air. Actually, considering the widespread availability of nitrox, using air for any diving whatsoever doesn't really make sense anymore. I don't.
As for 1000' deep sinkholes, using a ROV is probably the right idea.
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Re:Holy shit, that is deep.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Then I guess you'll have divers who wish for the good old days when you had to have skill to dive.
A similar technology for space suits is probably a lot easier though. Only a single atmosphere of pressure, and a near vacuum environment.
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Wonder if we'll ever have nanotech suits that make diving as safe as a submarine (or, hopefully, safer).
I'm trying to imagine how nanotech would help with diving, and not coming up with much. Are you thinking that somehow a nanotech suit could be strong enough to withstand the incredible pressures, yet still be flexible?
A similar technology for space suits is probably a lot easier though. Only a single atmosphere of pressure, and a near vacuum environment.
Yes, space is a much human-friendlier environment than a few hundred feet of water. Harder to reach, but easier to stay alive in.
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If, however, you take a normal breath at the surface, descend 90', and then ascend, the air will not expand and cause problems.
I've heard that free divers' lungs will crush to the size of a baseball or smaller at depth.
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As you descend the air is forced into your blood stream under pressure. And you have all this extra oxygen, which you use. As you ascend the air is withdrawn and you can end up with less oxygen than you need. Not good, it's why a lot of free divers black out on the ascent.
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I think you're confusing the bends with an embolism.
When you breathe at the surface and descend to 90', the air in your lungs will still be under 90' of water pressure (plus atmospheric pressure on top of that). Just like the air you would breathe from a tank at that depth. There will be less volume in your lungs but the pressure is the same and it will still be driven into (absorbed by) your tissues. When you ascend, bubbles will form in your tissues and cause the bends. People breathing from the surface
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A few minor corrections
Just as a few notes. With the PADI (recreational) diving, you can hit about 90' before you have to start dealing with decompression.
According to the PADI tables, you can spend 10 minutes at 140 feet before you're into decompression. At 90 feet you can stay for 30 minutes. The US Navy tables differ in some respects but agree on these limits.
130' and you start hitting nitrogen narcosis as O2 gets toxic as the pressure increases.
Narcosis actually begins to hit quite a bit shallower than 130. Most people notice mild symptoms by 80 feet, once they know what to look for. Oxygen toxicity depends on time as well as depth. At 130 feet (five atmospheres), ppO2 is about 1 atmosphere, which is safe for
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Nitrogen narcosis and oxygen toxicity are completely unrelated and quite separate phenomenon
Nitrogen narcosis makes you stupid due to the effects of a high partial pressure of INERT nitrogen on nerves, probably specifically on synapses. In my experience you reason so slowly when narc'd that you may as well not be able to reason at all, although the effects differ depending on circumstances and the individual involved.
Ox
Re:meh (Score:4, Informative)
Why not for this one? (Score:2)
Re:Why not for this one? (Score:5, Informative)
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David
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Of course, it turns out that it looks like there is a flat, sloped floor at the bottom, but there is still a tantalizing unmapped corner that may lead to deeper caverns.
I believe this has been tried before (Score:1)
In other news... (Score:2)
FTA... (Score:1)
So the builder even realizes that the chance of going to Europa is not a possibility. Talk about an angle to get funding money. I guess they thought that Europa sounds cool, and was referenced in movies so Joe and Jane Taxpayer can better understand why they need money.
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Nah, that's too obvious. All scientists are about getting more money. Evil scientists.
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One of my friends is down there now on that project. Vostock has always been on the menu, although probably not for something that big either. Europa is an entirely plausible venture as they have equipment on new horizon which is working rather well - although again, it's not for the prototype.
The gizmo has about 30+ microprocessors networked together, just about one for every section and function. I think once they get the basics operational
In the town, where I was born..... (Score:2)
We all hack in a robot submarine, a robot submarine, a robot submarine....
Perhaps this could map Lost Sea (Score:4, Interesting)
Thank goodness! (Score:2)
The DEPTHX was just covered on this podcast (Score:2)
http://www.theskepticsguide.org/skepticsguide/pod
At the bottom it found ... (Score:1)
Actually, it's not completely mapped! (Score:2)
Appropriate? (Score:1)
Easier way? (Score:2)
Caverns Unknown to Man (Score:2)
The man really was a god among divers, and saved uncounted divers through his use of accident analysis to create a safe methodology for cave diving. The ones who die, do not follow his methods (and yes, that include
It's an understatement: not deep enough! (Score:2)
Re:Best fictional appearance by a robot submarine. (Score:2)
How does it relate to those, in style and content?
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Then, again, how often do you get to read, a
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-Mike
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