There is no part of any ocean on earth that is 362011 feet below the surface.
Mariana trench
The deepest known portion of the ocean floor is called the Challenger Deep, located in the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific Ocean. It reaches a depth of about 36,000 feet (10,972 meters).
The portion of Earth's crust that lies beneath the ocean floor is called oceanic crust. It is thinner and denser than continental crust, primarily composed of basaltic rocks, and formed at mid-ocean ridges through volcanic activity.
The top layer of the ocean floor is called the "abyssal zone" or "abyssal plain." This region is characterized by flat, sediment-covered areas that lie below the continental shelf. The abyssal zone is the deepest part of the ocean floor and is typically found at depths greater than 4,000 meters.
That is a description of a trench, which is formed at tectonic plate boundaries where one plate is forced beneath another through a process called subduction. Trenches are among the deepest parts of the ocean floor.
Mariana trench
The Mariana trench is the deepest known oceanic floor - at a maximum known depth of 36,070 feet (+/- 130 feet).
Challenger deep.
The deepest known portion of the ocean floor is called the Challenger Deep, located in the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific Ocean. It reaches a depth of about 36,000 feet (10,972 meters).
Challenger deep.
The deepest parts of the ocean floor are caused by plate tectonic subduction and occur where the sea floor sinks back into the mantle in a subduction zone. These areas are called deep sea trenches and the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench in the Pacific is the deepest known point in Earth's oceans.
deepest part of the ocean floor called the abyssal plains.
The Pacific Ocean has the deepest trenches.
Elongated troughs on the ocean floor are called oceanic trenches. These features are formed by the subduction of one tectonic plate beneath another, creating deep depressions in the seabed. Oceanic trenches are some of the deepest parts of the Earth's crust.
A deep-ocean trench is a long, narrow depression in the ocean floor where tectonic plates are being pulled into the Earth's mantle in a process called subduction. These trenches are some of the deepest parts of the ocean and are typically associated with intense seismic activity and volcanic processes.
The Marianas trench .
The deepest parts of the ocean floor are caused by plate tectonic subduction and occur where the sea floor sinks back into the mantle in a subduction zone. These areas are called deep sea trenches and the Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench in the Pacific is the deepest known point in Earth's oceans.