Ah, another story of how the "eeeeeeeeevil" corporations gather together to plot how to destroy ancient and dangerous lifestyles and want to eternally undo an inhospitable wasteland, and we have to stir feelings in people to be angry about all this so that money can be donated somewhere to do something and supposedly keep things the way they are.
By allowing so many permits, if there are just a few days to climb, they literally are putting clients toward the back of the queue in danger. If Mr Kulkarni's Sherpa was telling him that there was no time to even take a photo because they had to head down for their safety, why were any Sherpas continuing to climb up with other mountaineers? If someone doesn't have a chance to summit based on the length of the line due to over permitting, they should receive a partial refund. I'm glad that Mr Alee was smart enough to recognize that he would be put at risk if he continued up from that far back in the queue.
At 11:40, some sort of fish shows up. "It's about 20cm long. It clearly has a backbone!" It also has eyes. I thought that eyes would have been lost to animals that never see any light. I have a question (unrelated) - how does communication with the surface work?
like several of Attenborough's nature documentaries recently, so much of this is CGI images. So few are real images, unless there is a human in the shot. These are artist's depictions of what things might possibly/probably look like.
I hate the ocean, especially the deep sea but I can’t help but find it interesting, especially deep sea creatures, I believe that there is life on other planets, I know we aren’t the only ones, I’ve literally seen UFOs with my own eyes multiple times, I’d hate but love to be able to go deep diving in a special submarine, imagine seeing these creatures with your own two eyes, some will never be seen again, I know there are even more creatures in the deepest parts of the Mariana Trench, the question is what and where? I can only imagine a ginormous sea creature that’s in plane sight but he can see clearly where we are and what where doing and he’s hiding, he doesn’t want to be found, he’s the god of the ocean
I’m guessing those fish and shrimp had passed away as someone said a fish that deep that gets pulled to the surface the pressure change kiss them? I’m just wondering because I know it’s for the matter of science but wouldn’t we want to keep as most of these creatures alive for being so rare and so sparse
19:40....cam man had 1 job...failed. a perfect ass on a woman whos a marine biologist who isnt a whore online or in rl....thats like..1 out of.....2 billion.
This video should be retitled "Watching Geologists Talk to Each Other and Look at Computers and Travel on Buses and Set up Camp." Not interesting at all. What a waste.
we haven't mapped in detail the whole ocean floor, but we do have approximate depth of the whole thing. We now have satellites that can give a rough approximation of the sea floor (with something like 1km resolution), and all the promising spots have been mapped more accurately with sonars. what we haven't done is actually go everywhere in person
@@Grouuumpf Thx for the detailed answer. I get the difference between remote imaging, with its inherent inaccuracies, vs first-hand, first-eye(?) visitation/exploration. Thanks again.
that fish is made of liquids and solids, which are incompressible. Hydrostatic pressure applies uniformly from all direction, not at all like a hydraulic press, so only things filled with gasses can get crushed
Thanks for the explanation and yes, exactly .. i actually found the answer a couple days after, when youtube brought me to a video about singking of mv derbyshire .. the ship was leaking in the bow and sunk 4kms deep somewhere near japan .. the bow, which was leaking and filled up with water before it sunk, stay basically pristine while the rest mostly crushed because it still carry some air trapped inside ..
Certain folk just can't stop exploring and invading areas where they don't belong. Sort of how they wound up on American soil and exterminating half the Indians.
David Attenborough documentaries are great. Just too bad you can't really hear his narration over the orchestral music swelling and subsiding with no clear relation to what's being depicted on screen.