The Mariana Trench shouldn't resemble a strip mall parking lot.
Deep Dive
On May 1, explorer Victor Vescovo broke the world record for deepest ocean dive by a human in a submarine when he reached a terrifying depth of nearly 10.9 kilometers (6.8 miles).
But what should have been a wholly celebratory moment soon turned bittersweet.
That's because amongst the pristine beauty of the Mariana Trench's seafloor, Vescovo noticed what he believes was a plastic bag and some candy wrappers — disturbing confirmation that human pollution now reaches even the most remote corners of our planet.
Water Waste
Vescovo completed the deep sea dive as part of a mission called the Five Deeps Expedition, through which he plans to explore the deepest points in all five of the world's oceans.
According to Reuters, he's hopeful his trash discovery will raise awareness about ocean pollution — and perhaps even encourage governments to do something about it.
"It wasn't completely surprising, although it was very disappointing to see obvious human contamination of the deepest point in the ocean," Vescovo said in an interview with the news agency, later adding that the ocean is "not a big garbage collection pool, even though it’s treated as such."
READ MORE: Mariana Trench: Deepest-ever sub dive finds plastic bag [BBC News]
More on ocean pollution: Shocker: Efforts to Make Oceans Cleaner Are Working (When You Aren’t Sabotaging Them)
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