Over the course of millions of years, helped along by a dino-killing asteroid, geologic pockmarks known as cenotes and blue holes fill the Yucatan peninsula, providing an oasis for animal life.
The discovery of the world’s deepest blue hole in Mexico’s Chetumal Bay has captivated the attention of geologists, marine biologists, and adventurers alike.This underwater sinkhole, known as ...
Scientists may have stumbled upon the deepest blue hole on Earth- a mysterious underwater cavern with depths that seem to have no end! A recent study published in Frontiers in Marine Science ...
The Blue Hole off the coast of Egypt is sometimes known as the 'most dangerous dive site on Earth', and a diver who went in ...
TUCKED deep inside the Arctic Circle lies an abandoned Soviet base that is home to the world's deepest manmade hole dubbed "Well to Hell". Located in northwestern Russia near the Norwegian border ...
According to reports, scientists have yet to reach the bottom of the Taam Ja' Blue Hole in Mexico's Chetumal Bay, which may be connected to a complex of submerged caverns and tunnels ...
Apparently, the deepest hole on our planet is in the Utah desert in the USA, though a quick Google will tell you that the ...
Only 5% of our oceans have been explored, so clearly there's a lot we don't know about what goes on in the deep. Sometimes discoveries are made that are later found to be entirely wrong.
A bottomless pit? For now, it appears that way. A team of oceanographers from several Mexican institutions say the Taam Ja' Blue Hole (TJBH) is the deepest in the world. It's located in Chetumal ...
Taam Ja’ Blue Hole took over the title of the world’s deepest blue hole — an underwater sinkhole — on April 29, a paper in Frontiers in Marine Science announced.
Over the course of millions of years, helped along by a dino-killing asteroid, geologic pockmarks known as cenotes and blue holes fill the Yucatan peninsula, providing an oasis for animal life. In ...
Researchers described how the underwater abyss’s extensive depths could harbour a “biodiversity to be explored” in a recent study published in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science.