Explorer Sets Record By Diving Earth’s Four Furthest Extreme

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A British-American explorer has become the first person to travel to Earth’s four furthest extremes after reaching the lowest point in the oceans, says an article published in The Scottish Sun.

Traversing Explorer

Richard Garriott, 59, has now traversed the north and south poles, reached Earth’s orbit and plunged to Challenger Deep, the deepest part of the Mariana Trench beneath the Pacific Ocean.

Born in Cambridge, England, Garriott made millions in the video game industry before pivoting to exploration in the 2000s.

Strapped into a deep sea submersible, the video game pioneer and entrepreneur sank seven miles on March 1.

Deep depth journey

To put that into perspective, Mount Everest is 5.5 miles high.

“I’ve been to the bottom of the Earth – you can’t go deeper than that,” he said from the expedition ship Pressure Drop, as reported by The Times.

“I am the first person to go pole to pole, space and deep and the second person – first male – to go space [to] deep.”

Exploring deep points

The son of a Nasa astronaut, Garriott described the alien-like life found 35,000ft (11,000m) beneath sea level.

“There was a whole variety of small and somewhat difficult to see lifeforms, small sea cucumber-related creatures and translucent creatures like flatworms,” he said.

Challenger Deep

Garriott made the dive on board the “Limiting Factor”, a deep submergence vehicle developed by undersea explorer Victor Vescovo.

In August 2020, former Nasa astronaut Kathy Sullivan used the vessel to become the first space traveller and first women to dive to Challenger Deep.

Like Sullivan, Garriott made the trip as part of dives to research the bottom of the Marianna Trench and collect scientific samples.

Little is known about the conditions and wildlife at Earth’s deepest points because the technology to get there is still in its nascent stages.

Limitation factor

Limiting Factor is the only commercially available submarine capable of withstanding the extreme pressure at the bottom of the ocean.

It took four hours for the crew to reach Challenger Deep.

On the way up, at a depth of about 1,600ft (500m), Garriott and sub pilot Victor came across a siphonophore, a colony of cells that connect to form what appears to be a single creature.

“It looked a bit like a big mop of tentacles, each a metre in length,” he said.

“We bumped into it and it broke into all these pieces that grow into more siphonophores. We didn’t harm it, it just created more.”

ISS Explorations

He trekked to the South Pole in 1998, spent ten days in orbit on the International Space Station in 2008 and went to the North Pole in 2018.

Garriott is said to have paid Russian space agency Roscosmos $30million for his space trip, which was turned into an eight-minute documentary.

Dream come true

It was the fulfilment of a lifelong ambition for the multimillionaire, who wanted to follow in the footsteps of his father, Nasa astronaut Own Garriott.

Garriott isn’t the first famous explorer to reach the bottom of the Marianna Trench.

The Alien World visitors

Garriott isn’t the first famous explorer to reach the bottom of the Marianna Trench.

Oscar winning movie maker James Cameron became the first person to make a solo journey to Challenger Deep back in 2012.

The Titanic director told how he hurtled down a “yawning chasm” into the “last frontier on planet Earth”.

Cameron said he was stunned by the “completely featureless, alien world”.

Aspiration Chances

In other news, a Japanese billionaire last week launched a search for eight people to join him as the first private passengers on a trip around the moon.

A giant squid has been captured looming over a deep sea probe in a rare photograph.

And, Nasa has unveiled a new lunar lander that could put astronauts back on the Moon in 2024.

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Source : The Scottish Sun