The director of the movie Titanic was able to use his submarine to reach the deepest point on the Earth, as well as the wrecks of the Titanic and the Bismarck.
The director who was able to reach the deepest point on Earth with his submarine, and also one of the few who visited the site of the sinking of the famous Titanic, as well as the German destroyer Bismarck.
James Cameron:
James Cameron is considered the most successful director in modern history, not only because of his famous cinematic works, but because he was able to dive into the deepest point on this planet.
James Cameron was born in Canada and moved to the United States in the early 1970s, majoring in physics at California State University. After school, he quickly rose in the film industry
James Cameron has directed famous films such as:
The Terminator (1984)
Titanic (1997)
Avatar (2009)
This, for example, a few. These films received huge viewership and financial profits, and also won many Oscars. Today, he is one of the most recognized directors in Hollywood.
James Cameron, 68 years old, is a Canadian director and billionaire who lives in the United States of America. He was born on August 16, 1954. He is the director of one of the most famous films in the history of cinema, Titanic and Avatar.
James Cameron's Deep Challenger is the deepest point on Earth
On March 26, 2012, James Cameron was able to dive to the deepest point on Earth. He was thus the first person in history to dive to the deepest point on Earth with his own submarine, the Deep Sea Challenger. Therefore, the deepest point on Earth was named after his Deep Sea Challenger submarine.
Deep Sea Challenger is James Cameron's private submarine, a small submarine with advanced technology after he spent millions of dollars developing it.
The length of the Deep Sea Challenger submarine is 8 meters. The journey to descend the Deep Sea Challenger submarine to the deepest point on Earth lasted about two hours and 36 minutes, while the journey to ascend the James Cameron Deep Sea Challenger submarine was faster and easier, as the journey to ascend the submarine took only approximately 70 minutes. ,
Deep Sea Challenger
While James Cameron remained in his Deep Sea Challenger submarine at the deepest point in the Mariana Trench and the Earth for nearly six hours, during which he collected images and data in the mysterious and deepest region on the planet Earth, according to the National Geographic Society.
This was not the first time that James Cameron dived his submarine, the Deep Sea Challenger, in the ocean, as he was able to visit the site of the sinking of the Titanic and the Bismarck in the Atlantic Ocean.
Mariana Trench:
The Mariana Trench is the deepest sea point in the world in the western Pacific Ocean, which is about 11 kilometers below the surface of the water. That point was named the Mariana Trench by Angola in honor of the Queen of Spain during the Spanish colonization of Angola.
It is a trench located in the Pacific Ocean between Japan and the Philippines and is the lowest point on planet Earth.
The trench is located in the western Pacific Ocean, east of the Philippines and about 120 miles east of the Mariana Islands
The trench is 2,550 square kilometers long while the Mariana Trench is about 70 square kilometers wide
The deepest point in the trench is known as Challenger Deep, which is about 11 kilometers deep. This extreme depth makes the pressure at the bottom very strong, and the water pressure may reach eight tons per square inch.
Distance traveled by Deep Sea Challenger
You can imagine that the Burj Khalifa, known as the tallest human-made building, is 828 meters tall. So, we need more than 13 towers like the Burj Khalifa to reach the deepest point on the planet Earth (Mariana Trench), or we need to place Mount Everest, the highest mountain peak on the planet Earth. Its height reaches 8,848 meters, and above it are 3 other towers, such as Burj Khalifa, to reach the deepest point on planet Earth.
James Cameron's adventure with his Deep Sea Challenger submarine was documented in a 3D feature-length documentary, broadcast on the National Geographic Channel.
Source: websites