James Cameron completes his dive to deepest point on Earth
- Published
Hollywood movie director, James Cameron, has completed his challenge to dive to the deepest point on the planet.
He successfully reached the bottom of the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean in a specially designed one-man submarine, the Deepsea Challenger.
The trench is a massive 7 miles deep and is 120 times bigger than the Grand Canyon.
The Avatar director is the first person to get there in over 50 years.
Cameron managed to stay down in the trench for three hours.
The bottom of the Mariana Trench is 7 miles or 11 kilometres down
That's over a mile deeper than Mount Everest is high
It's like 115 Big Bens stacked on top of each other
At that depth, the water temperature is barely above freezing, and the pressure is over 1,000 times greater than at the surface
He was able to collect samples to see what scientists can learn about life in the deepest part of the ocean.
Luckily for us the whole expedition was filmed and there are plans to make the footage into an epic 3D film.
As well as Avatar, James Cameron directed the films Titanic and the Abyss and that's where he got a taste for the oceans.