Aidan, Gaynor and Sophie react to a video that explains how the ocean is way deeper than you think! Link to original video - • The Ocean is Way Deepe... insta - @officeblokedaz
@Office Bloke Daz James Cameron, the guy who dove way down into the Mariana Trench in a submarine is a super famous movie director. He's the guy who directed Titanic, Avatar, Terminator 1 and 2, and tons of other stuff
The truth is that history is a very flimsy endeavor. Most people are ignorant of it, a lot of people simply don't like to think about it, and many don't even understand the flow of time and only see their own perception of it. I think the main thing to blame is education. I don't think we collectively have figured out the proper way to teach history yet. So don't blame people too much. Blame society. Which includes both other people and yourself. In fact, don't blame, but do something about it. Blaming stuff for bad things in the world is weak sauce.
The 1960 dive took place in a bathyscaph. The upper portion is a large tank filled with gasoline, which is lighter than water. It is essentially a underwater blimp, only a liquid like gasoline can be used for buoyancy, as liquids are in-compressible. On the bottom is a 8 foot diameter ball with walls I think where 8 inch's thick, this is the pressure vessel the crew were in. It took them, I believe 6 hours to drop to the bottom. I read about it in National Geographic.
The bends only happen while breathing compressed air at depth. The air in a scuba tank is compressed air. As you breathe that air and get closer to the surface the compressed air expands in your lungs, that’s when you get the bends. Free divers, diving without air tanks, are susceptible to shallow water blackout. Keep up the great videos.
Technically, it is the nitrogen from the compressed air that seeps into tissues at depth from the (relatively) high pressure. When you get near the surface, the pressure reduces enough for that trapped nitrogen to come rushing back out. This causes tissue damage, extreme pain, respiratory distress, and potentially blacking out due to rapid changes in blood pressure. "The Bends" is officially known as nitrogen narcosis.
When Bismarck sank, the wreck took just 10 minutes to reach the bottom, landing on the side of an extinct volcano. The battleship then began to slide down the slope causing a turbidity flow and later an avalanche. The forces of the liquid flow and down blast pushed the ship sideways causing the hull to "sail" through the mud leaving a carved path in the seabed. Dr. Ballard recalls seeing the disturbed seabed as they tracked towards the wreck. They even saw the area where the ship landed and slid backwards.
That's too bad and I hope you one day find your way to comfort while being in water, because aside from attempting to dive to extreme depths in the ocean water is actually a pleasant thing to play and swim around in as well as fun to go boating in if you don't have any harassing fear feelings about water. Relaxation is the sensation water should bring so that you can relax and float on it or play in it, not feel afraid of it just for standing in it. If you are still able to stand in it then it shouldn't have to be a fear, because you don't even have to try to float or swim if you can still stand. People who haven't learned how to float or swim yet would be most fearful of water deep enough that they cant stand anymore in it. Even young toddler kids learn to have fun kicking their legs in water practicing at swimming form with their daddy holding them above the surface, humans have a friendly enough relationship with water.
@@maxpeck7382 for me it's more something to do with being in an environment you can't control like I have never been to the Sahara before but I would imagine it would terrify me too just sand as far as the eye can see, like I could deal with a pool just fine but open water fills me with such dread
James Cameron is the creator and director of the Avatar films, Aliens, Etc. He is also a well versed inventor. Plus he is massively rich and hires scientist to help him create these things. The ocean is one of his favorite joys.
9:51 lol, it's simple, the craft just has to be able to survive the pressure. It like a spacecraft. It has an atmosphere that's kept close to sea level pressure so the operators of the sub aren't subject of the outside pressure. The problem with driving is that your body is subject to the outside pressures and you're being crushed more and more, the deeper you go.
Actually the Bends is what you get when you go back to the surface too quickly. The quick change in pressure against your body creates air bubbles in your blood.
He was an executive producer of Point Break. He wasn't a director. He did the first 2 Terminator movies, The Avatar Franchise, True Lies, Piranha 2, Aliens and The Abyss. He also co-written Rambo 2, Strange Days and Alita: Battle Angel.
Yesss I love these reactions! I would love to see oversimplified WW2 reaction as that is my favorite video by oversimplified and one of my favorite topics to learn about.
James Cameron directed Titanic, the Avatars, and the Terminators. The two guys that have the record for depth were in a submarine that had inner and outer windows. When they were in the Challenger Deep, the outer windows on the sub cracked from the pressure. They soldiered on anyway. They captured some video of wildlife at the deepest part of the ocean before stirring up sediment that ruined their vision. They ascended and survived.
To answer the question of how do we send machinery so far underwater. (Brace for some reading here) I work for a company that does geographical and pipeline surveys. Their a research submarines built to withstand pressure of going to depths of 8,000 meters and Autonomous Underwater Vehicles (6500 meters) map out the terrain below the water using cameras and lasers. Their is possibly others that can go way further but that would be the deepest dive that we have done. To give you and idea though the electronics inside our AUV are protected in a Titanium sphere that is approximately 25cm wide and are 4.8cm thick and filled with mineral oil to withstand the pressure as most moving parts are made the same way We Launch vehicles on the rear of the boat inside of what would look like a shipping container but heavily modified. there is a dock for the AUV inside there. However this "dock" is called a stinger and it moves forward back and lowers like a ramp into the water and raises back straight out of the water. As the vessel we are on is going about 4knots its enough to pull the vehicle off the ramp when lowered in the water. It then will make its dive and do as operators please (Sometimes lol). We recover by throwing a hook out into the water that will hook onto a rope between the nose of it which does release and we have to aim between the nose and the vehicle itself (which sometimes takes a few tries do to high winds or waves) once we hook it we attach it to a winch which will pull the vehicle onto the ramp. EDIT: To give you an idea it takes 2 - 2 1/2 hrs to ascent from 4000m depths and even longer to descend. Actual recovery in total takes us 3-4hrs depending on weather (waves, winds, rain etc..) To spare you the reading on the DSV sub. We simply use a crane on the vessel to lower the cage it sits on into the water and is then controlled by a "pilot" who controls the vehicle. THe move the vehicle out of its cage and proceed with the dive. There are many other steps in both processes however I'm not allowed to reveal all of that information but I hope that this lengthy text gives some insight 👌
When he mentions the depth equal to Mount Everest, remember that Everest itself is just under 4000 m tall so he’s also including the thick continent underneath it. Base camp at Mount Everest is at 17,000 feet and the peak is at 29,000 so not only is he talking about the tall mountain itself but all of the continent underneath it which gets it up from sea level.
Free diving is absolutely insane. The diver grabs a weight and sings and high speed and releases when they have had enough and then try to get to the surface. Nuts. No bends because they don't spend enough time at depth.
There's a reservoir lake built for hydroelectricity about 35 miles from me during the great depression that used to be parts of a small town area. Graves and houses on the bottom. Never been that deep personally. Rumors possibly. It was a town area though.
I assume you are talking about the Quabbin Reservoir that delivers water to Boston. There are no houses or graves as they were all removed; however, you can still see some stone foundations under water. Jane Yolen, a well known children’s author, wrote a book about it, “Letting Swift River Go.”
The bends come from not getting the Gas out of your blood. Free divers don't have too worry about it because they are holding 1 breath. Free divers risk shallow water black outs, which cause them to drown.
0:26 of course not, even vertically, not even close, haha, perhaps you saw something that said "The pressure down there is higher than (something) many (something) jets on top of you"
I’m with Sophie, if I can help it, I’ll never go into the ocean again. There are too many things swimming around you that you don’t know about. Last time I was in the Pacific was probably about 1991. Great reaction.
The outside window cracked on the way down to the bottom of Mariana’s trench. They decided to keep going anyway. Figure if the window breaks you’ll die instantly from the pressure alone
8:16 those fish would look slightly more recognisable as fish in the water at the depths they inhabit. The problem is, once theyre removed from the water a photographed, their body's have already gone through a massive transformation due to being removed from the pressure. It's like if aleins saw a person for the first time but that person had been exposed to the vacuum of space, so they just assume all people look bloated and half exploded, eyes bulging out, spewing liquids from literally every orifice ect. Just a gross mess. In their home environment they look a bit of normal, except the angler fish, which always looks fucked up.
The first time I saw this was with two friends and we were all stoned (recreational state) and I wouldn't recommend it XD Between this and how big is the universe really, I didn't sleep easy that night
A diver gets the BENZ, COMING UP. This is due to the nitrogen bubbles in the bloodstream, so the diver must ascend slowly, so that the nitrogen does not "BOIL" The lungs, in layman's terms. Hence, decompression.
Since you guys were talking about the missing passenger plane, I recommend react to it also Reallifelore “What happened to Malaysian Airline Flight MH370”
The guy that swam down to 214 meters they have a rope they swim next to that they follow down and up. Also the jumbo jets you were almost right as it is explained in this very video.
There's footage online of the deepest sea dive in one of those vessels. I will not swim in the ocean! We have no idea what's really in there, more than 80% of our ocean is unmapped, unobserved, and unexplored. We are not suppose to be in the water just like fish are not meant to be on land. if we were meant to be we'd have gills and they'd have lungs and feet.
You don't get the bends from just being and remaining deeper under water at the depth you are exploring, you get the bends from ascending quickly after being under water. Nitrogen builds in the bloodstream while being deep underwater with just your own body in a basic dive suit, you need to be in a pressurized vessel like a sub or a suit made like a hard material shelled pressurized container of a dive suit that is a vessel like a sub itself to not build up Nitrogen while at depth. The Nitrogen in the bloodstream isn't the big problem it is ascending too fast that makes the gas release too fast and can make traveling nitrogen bubbles in the bloodstream and make your blood bubble like it's boiling inside the veins, it can kill you if you don't ascend in stages at differing depths waiting for a time at each stage for your blood to acclimate to that level of rising closer to the surface. Divers have to account for how much oxygen they need to have to use during ascending back to the surface, because they have to stop and wait at differing levels as they ascend to the surface, so they can only use a certain amount of their oxygen exploring the bottom till they need to use the rest for getting back to the surface.
My ex and I would eat tacos and get messed up and watch the discovery Channel here in the US. This is very general and not much detail. But yes some of the ugliest fish are all in the dark. However, there are fish who also light up. NOT sure if it's same part but not the same levels I think. But just looking up flowing ocean fish or something, and it's amazing.
You should react to the Kyle Carpenter story. It was the video about to come on at the end of your video. He was a medal of honor recipient with an amazing story
The problem is that the weight of the water above creates so much pressure that there is nothing strong enough to withstand the pressure pushing in on it.
James Cameron was the person responsible for the "Titanic" film. He only filmed as deep as was necessary for the ACTUAL Titanic and some other ventures.
My guess as why the guys from the 60's were able to go down deeper than James Cameron in 2012 were that they were weighed down by their massive balls. Explorers back then were built different
I think it's cause no one can actually see down there and the fact that it's so high pressure so they don't look that good and i'm pretty sure the eyes are glazed over because it's not being used they use other things to sense their surroundings
If someone offered me $5 million dollars to go down in one of those manned subs like Cameron went, I wouldn't do it. I would be absolutely terrified of all the things that could happen. What happens if the motor stops, no one can save you. Or if the sub has a defect and implodes from the pressure. Plus, all the darkness and not knowing what is lurking in that darkness. No thanks....I found it amazing that sea turtles can go that deep. Why would they go that deep??
How would you know whether an aquatic creature does or doesn't exist, considering we still don't know literally the half of the world's oceans? Ah, because storybooks and myths were confounded based upon truth. You wouldn't believe what used to or does exist now. If descendents of dinosaurs exist today, ie alligator or crocodile, then why not hybrids?
Because I think he set up the channel to get them started since he already had name recognition on his main channel, Office Blokes. I don't know this for sure, but I think the plan was to have him on initially and maybe do a few appearances after that to get the channel started for them.
what a moronic question. i could give you 50 different valid reasons and there would still be more. how about 1 simple one. BECAUSE THEY WANTED TO. jesus christ