Well it is mostly deep water fish such as angeler fish, and the supposedly extinct megalodone shark.
Yes..but don't tell them I told you....
Hardly any organisms can survive in the Mariana Trench due to the pressures at that extreme depth. Xenophyophores, amphipods, sea cucumbers, snailfish and jellyfish are examples of organisms that live in the Mariana Trench.
Yes, Mariana's Trench is an active subduction zone.
Named for the Mariana Islands which lie just to the east of the trench. The islands were named after Spanish Queen Mariana of Austria in the 17th century, when Spain started the colonization of the archipielago of islands.
The Mariana Trench is the deepest point in any ocean and is located in the Pacific Ocean.
The trench is in the ocean. The 14 islands nearby are called the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands.
there are no crabs in mariana's trench; only jelly fish sea cucumbers and shrimp
Hardly any organisms can survive in the Mariana Trench due to the pressures at that extreme depth. Xenophyophores, amphipods, sea cucumbers, snailfish and jellyfish are examples of organisms that live in the Mariana Trench.
The Mariana Trench is a convergent plate boundary.
Yes, Mariana's Trench is an active subduction zone.
The Mariana trench is under the Mariana islands in the pacific ocean and is 11.03 km deep.
The Mariana trench has a very harsh environment and it is a deep sea environment.
The submersible Trieste traveled to the bottom of mariana trench
No, it is east of the mariana islands
Named for the Mariana Islands which lie just to the east of the trench. The islands were named after Spanish Queen Mariana of Austria in the 17th century, when Spain started the colonization of the archipielago of islands.
There are 8 tons per square inch of pressure in Mariana Trench
It is in the Mariana Trench!
yes