
In Our Time The Mariana Trench
242 snips
Feb 19, 2026 Jon Copley, a deep-sea biologist, explains hadal life and molecular adaptations. Alan Jamieson, an experienced submersible pilot and trench researcher, shares hair-raising dive stories and engineering challenges. Heather Stewart, a geoscientist, gives geological context on subduction trenches and seafloor processes. They discuss trench discovery, bizarre trench fauna, sediment flows, pollution at depth, and risks from mining and climate change.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Strange Finds At Challenger Deep
- Alan Jamieson reported bizarre man-made finds: discarded fibre-optic cables carpeting Challenger Deep and an SR-71 Blackbird reportedly dumped into a trench.
- These discoveries reveal both experimental equipment and deliberate disposals at extreme depths.
Food Sources: Snow And Chemical Oases
- Trench communities feed largely on marine snow, concentrating organic matter via funneling, making the seafloor both 'toilet and mortuary.'
- Cold seeps and methane-driven ecosystems create local oases of chemically powered life, found in some trenches down to >9,000 metres.
Mariana Is Extreme But Not Typical
- The Mariana Trench is scientifically valuable for studying extreme depth but is not representative of all trenches because it's remote, oligotrophic and lacks continental inputs.
- Other trenches (Tonga, Kermadec, South Sandwich) may be more active and informative for geological and ecological processes.













