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.
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ANECDOTE

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.
INSIGHT

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.
INSIGHT

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.
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