Ocean World The vivid life of the Ocean Colorful Collection of Deep-Sea Animals
The vivid life of the Ocean is a beautiful and RELAXING 8K movie about Sea Life and Sea Animals. In this video, we can see sea animals from all over the world, with beautiful colours and shapes for relaxing sleep or relaxing time. It is estimated that 70 and 80 per cent of all life on earth reside below the surface of the oceans, and oceans contain 99 per cent of the planet's habitable space. Less than 11% of that space has been explored by humans. About 85% of the area and 90% of the volume are from the dark and cold environment we call the deep sea. The average depth of the ocean is 3,761 meters. The average elevation of the terrain is 850 meters. So there are at least 236,878 marine species, but most likely at least 750,000 marine species, and possibly up to 25 million marine species. How surprising! The lowest known point on our Earth, called Challenger Deep, is 11,034 meters deep, in the Mariana Trench in the western Pacific Ocean. To get an idea of its depth, if I could get to the top of Everest and put it at the bottom of that place, that would still be more than a mile of the ocean above. The Dead Sea is the lowest land point on Earth at 396 meters below sea level. Some facts about the ocean and sea life: - Seawater is blue and not transparent. Sunlight is made up of all colours. Upon reaching the sea, this white light passes through the water, absorbing the red and orange tones and allowing the green and blue tones to pass through. - The Pacific Ocean is the largest in the world. It occupies a third of its surface and extends about 15,000 km from the Bering Sea bordering the North Pole to the south of Antarctica. The ocean clam, a mollusc that lives in the North Atlantic Ocean, is the oldest known animal in history with an estimated age of 507 years. It is about 8 cm long. - The largest mountain region in the world is located under the sea and is known as the mid-oceanic ridge that runs between the Atlantic Ocean to the Indian Ocean and the Pacific Ocean
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