The Deepest Map: Charting the Mariana Trench

From a hemp rope dropped over a ship's rail in 1875 to autonomous robots tracing sonar beams across the seafloor, this episode follows the slow, meticulous science of measuring the deepest place on Earth — the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific, nearly eleven kilometres down. A quiet journey through the history of depth-sounding technology, the 1960 dive to the very bottom, and what the maps made over 150 years tell us about how our planet is built.

The Deepest Map: Charting the Mariana Trench
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The Mariana Trench is about 11 kilometres deep — a depth that took humans 150 years, dozens of ships, and several generations of technology just to measure. This episode follows that story, from the first tentative soundings made by HMS Challenger in 1875, through the acoustic revolution of the 1920s, the dangerous descent of the bathyscaphe Trieste in 1960, and on into the robotic swath-mapping surveys that finally gave us something approaching a real picture of what is down there.
The science of depth measurement turns out to be quieter and stranger than you might expect. It's a story of waiting — for a rope to hit bottom, for an echo to return, for an autonomous robot to surface with its data card. And it is, in a small way, a story about the limits of knowledge: even today, the best measurements of Challenger Deep carry an uncertainty of several dozen metres, because sound itself changes speed as it descends into cold, high-pressure water. The trench is still, in some senses, being mapped.

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