The Puerto Rico Trench is an oceanic trench located on the boundary between the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. The island of Puerto Rico lies immediately to the south of the fault zone and the trench. The trench is 800 kilometers (500 mi) long and has a maximum a depth of 8,605 meters (28,232 ft) at Milwaukee Deep, which is the deepest point in the Atlantic Ocean.
The Puerto Rico Trench.
Puerto Rico Trench.
Puerto Rico Trench.
The Puerto Rico trench is 8,800 meter's deep (28,232 ft) under water so I'm guessing its freezing down there.
no its the second after the Puerto Rico trench
The Puerto Rico Trench is a subduction zone plate boundary, where the North American Plate is subducting beneath the Caribbean Plate. This causes deep earthquakes and the formation of a deep ocean trench in the region.
The answer to your question, concerning the deepest trench in the Atlantic Ocean, is that of the Puerto Rico Trench. It is actually found upon the boundary between the Caribbean Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. This trench has been measured at a maximum depth of 28,232 ft; a depth of little over five miles! I hope that this answers your question.
The Puerto Rico Trench, in the North Atlantic, is the deepest, it has recently been measured at 8,742 metres (28,681 ft).
The Puerto Rico Trench is located near 20 degrees north and 65 degrees west in the Atlantic Ocean. It is the deepest part of the Atlantic Ocean, reaching depths of over 8,300 meters.
35,400 feet deep
Because the pressure of the water in the Puerto Rico trench is much higher than at the surface of the Caribbean Sean, the temperature at which water boils would be significantly higher than at the surface.
8,370 m (27,453 ft) in the Puerto Rico Trench in 1970