Dive Into Darkness: 24 Chilling Ocean Secrets That Will Haunt Your Dreams Forever

Dive Into Darkness: 24 Chilling Ocean Secrets That Will Haunt Your Dreams Forever

colorforge , NOAA Report

Bioluminescent jellyfish glowing blue in dark water, illustrating some of the creepiest facts about the ocean. The largest biomass migration takes place every night when deep sea animals come up to feed

Supraman83 , Sigmund Report

Underwater ocean scene with coral reef and fish, illustrating some of the creepiest facts about the ocean depths. Only 5% of the entire ocean in the world has been discovered, that means that there is still 95% unmapped.

i9rzasm , NOAA Report

Close-up view of a crashing ocean wave, highlighting the power and mystery of the ocean’s depths. I tell new scuba divers this: The ocean doesn’t care about you. It’s not actively trying to kill you. But it will do a lot of things on its own that will absolutely kill you if you’re not prepared and paying attention.

I realize this could apply to any natural environment but it feels much more apt when talking about the ocean. One wave that you weren’t prepared for can make your day pretty bad. For the ocean it’s just business as usual.

bg-j38 , Mark Harpur Report

Dark blue ocean waves with white foam, depicting the mysterious and creepy facts about the ocean's deep water. Point Nemo is the most isolated place in the world. It’s in the middle of the South Pacific gyre, which is a massive rotating current that basically keeps any nutrients rich water from ever getting in. So there is no sea life anywhere to be found except for a few crabs and bacteria that live near some thermal vents on the ocean floor. It’s so far away from any land that if you sailed there the closest people would be on the international space station. This is the location HP Lovecraft was describing when he provided the location of R’Lyeh where Cthulu and the other old ones love, although Lovecraft’s coordinates were slightly off.

And in 1997 the loudest unidentified underwater sound ever recorded, known as “the bloop”, originated near there. It was loud enough that it was recorded from multiple sensors 5000 miles apart and lasted for over a minute.

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