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If you cut Mount Everest off at sea level and put it on the ocean bottom in the Challenger Deep, there would still be over a mile of water over the top of it!
gene carl feldman (gene@seawifs.gsfc.nasa.gov) (301) 286-9428 Judith Gradwohl, Smithsonian Institution (Curator/Ocean Planet)
In general, the continents stand about three miles above the ocean floor. According to the National Geographic Atlas, the deepest-known part of the ocean measures 10,924 meters (35,839 feet), in the ...
Question: How many miles is the deepest ocean? ---Scott Answer: According to my World Almanac, the Pacific Ocean has the greatest average depth -- 12,925 feet, or almost 2 1/2 miles.
Home » Deepest Point in the Oceans ... Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench is the deepest point in Earth's oceans.
The deepest ocean in the world is the Pacific Ocean, with an average depth of 13,215 feet.
At the ocean's deepest point, the water pressure is the equivalent of having about 50 jumbo jets piled on top of you.
Most parts of the ocean are about 5 kilometers (3 miles) deep. However, deep ocean trenches can be as much as 11 km (7 miles) deep. The deepest point in the world's oceans is the Challenger Deep, ...
Mariana Trench, depression in the floor of the Pacific Ocean, the deepest seafloor depression in the world. ... Explore the Mariana Trench, the deepest part of the Ocean, ...
Pacific Ocean, largest and deepest of the world’s five oceans, covering more than a third of the earth’s surface and containing more than half of its.
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