36,569 feet deep
The deepest part of the Indian ocean is in the Diamantina Trench. It is 26,401 feet and 8,047 meters deep.
The South Pacific Ocean is 35,797 feet deep at it's deepest point. This means that the deepest point is 10,911 meters deep.
The Pacific Ocean's Mariana Trench is the deepest part of the ocean, at 35,813 feet deep.
the ocean and its x feet and its near ....
The deepest point in the Pacific Ocean (and the world) is the Challenger Deep, Mariana Trench, Western Pacific Ocean: 35,840 feet / 10,924 meters deep.
Mariana's Trench, the deepest part of the Pacific Ocean, is around 35,000 feet deep. That is nearly 7 miles.
nothing. the midnight zone is the deepest part of the ocean.
Today scientists know that on average the ocean is 2.3 miles (3.7 kilometers) deep, but many parts are much shallower or deeper. The deepest parts of the ocean are trenches – long, narrow depressions, like a trench in the ground, but much bigger. The HMS Challenger sampled one of these zones at the southern end of the Mariana Trench, which might be the deepest point in the ocean. Known as the Challenger Deep, it is 35,768 to 36,037 feet deep – almost 7 miles (11 kilometers).
The Congo River in Africa is the deepest river channel (720 ft deep). The Challenger Deep, part of the Marianas Trench in the pacific Ocean, is the deepest sea channel, at 36,197 feet.
The hydrosphere is the depth of the deepest ocean. 14,000-feet. Challenger Deep, the deepest part of the ocean is almost seven-miles deep. The hydrosphere contains all the water on or near the surface of the earth, including water found in clouds.
Deepest ocean: Pacific, in the Mariana Trench. Also known as the Challenger Deep. 36,201 feet down.
The deepest ocean depth to be sounded is in the Challenger Deep of the Mariana Trench at a depth of 10,911 m (35,798 ft) below sea level.Underwater the Marianas Trench would be the deepest Trench in the World.Challenger Deep's Deepest part is about 35,838 feet deep (11035 meters).The deepest point in any ocean is the Mariana Trench (aka Challenger Deep) in the western Pacific Ocean at 11,033 metres deep.