Slashdot Mirror


Robot Submarine Maps World's Deepest Sinkhole

holy_calamity writes "The world's deepest water-filled sinkhole has finally been mapped — by a robotic submarine whose descendants may one day swim on one of Jupiter's moons. The last attempt to find the bottom resulted in the SCUBA diving depth record and the death of a diving legend. The sub's sonar found that the divers had descended to only about 10m from the floor. The sub's mapping also indicated that the sinkhole, which is over 300m deep, could connect to even deeper caves."

4 of 123 comments (clear)

  1. Deep Diving Risks by wildsurf · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This reminds me of the amazing (and sobering) story of Dave Shaw, who perished in a deep freshwater cavern trying to recover the body of a fellow diver. Quite a read, if you have 20 minutes.

    --
    Weeks of coding saves hours of planning.
  2. Re:Holy shit, that is deep.... by Fuji+Kitakyusho · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Crazy. I've done ~380 fsw on trimix, with four different decompression gases, and it was a logistical headache. I know that one team has done the Edmund Fitzgerald on SCUBA, but at those depths the logistical issues, risks and costs escalate to the point that you have to wonder what you are gaining over surface supported surface supply or saturation diving - a much safer option than SCUBA. Stunts like the one Sheck pulled, or those by Jim Bowden, etc., are nothing more than showboating for the sake of setting records. Problem is, the record you set might not be the one you were shooting for. (Most preventable death award goes to...)

    With trimix being so accessable now, it doesn't make any sense to me why anyone would continue to endanger themselves by doing deep dives on air. Actually, considering the widespread availability of nitrox, using air for any diving whatsoever doesn't really make sense anymore. I don't.

    As for 1000' deep sinkholes, using a ROV is probably the right idea.

  3. Re:Holy shit, that is deep.... by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Wonder if we'll ever have nanotech suits that make diving as safe as a submarine (or, hopefully, safer).

    Then I guess you'll have divers who wish for the good old days when you had to have skill to dive.

    A similar technology for space suits is probably a lot easier though. Only a single atmosphere of pressure, and a near vacuum environment.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  4. Perhaps this could map Lost Sea by dmleach · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The world's largest known underground lake is Lost Sea, in Tennessee between Chattanooga and Knoxville. It's worth stopping off if you're ever in the area. Back in the 1970's, a group of divers tried to map the lake. The bubbles from their air tanks dislodged so much debris from the ceilings of the caves that they were unable to complete the project. I wonder if something like this robot would be able to finish the job.