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By the middle of the nineteenth century, as scientists explored the frontiers of polar regions and the atmosphere, the ocean remained silent and inaccessible. ... Google Books
Originally published: 2005
Author: Helen M. Rozwadowski
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How much of the ocean have we explored in 2024?
What drives astronomers to ask, “What's out there?” and oceanographers, “What's down there?” Despite covering 71 percent of the planet, only 5 percent of the ocean has been explored.
How do you describe the ocean?
An ocean is a continuous body of salt water that is contained in an enormous basin on Earth's surface. The major oceans and their marginal seas cover nearly 71 percent of Earth's surface, with an average depth of 3,688 metres (12,100 feet).
How many miles deep is the ocean?
The ocean has an average depth of approximately 3.7 kilometres (or 2.3 miles). A calculation from satellite measurements in 2010 put the average depth at 3,682 metres (12,080 feet). However, at the time only about 10% of Earth's seafloor had been mapped to high resolution, so this figure is only an estimate.
How much of the ocean isn't explored?
More than 80 percent of the ocean has never been mapped, explored, or even seen by humans. A far greater percentage of the surfaces of the moon and the planet Mars has been mapped and studied than of our own ocean floor.
Fathoming the Oceans reminds the reader that humanity has a long history with the deep ocean, much longer than most people realize. The first systematic attempt ...
Oct 2, 2015 · Remarkably, in less than 150 years, ocean explorers and scientists would go on to visit the great depths of the Marianas Trench and discover the ...
thoroughly exploring and developing the ocean's resources. Both Fathoming the Ocean and Oceanographers and the Cold War will be of interest to historians of ...
Helen Rozwadowski tells the story, without ever using the word “interdisciplinary,” of how oceanography came to be the integrated field it is today. Ocean ...
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· $19.99
Mar 31, 2005 · The ocean emerged as important new territory, and scientific interests intersected with those of merchant-industrialists and politicians.