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The world ocean covers more than 70% of the Earth’s surface, contains 97% of its water,
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and is filled to the brim with mysteries.
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Bright red tides, sound anomalies, bizarre creatures lurking in the ocean’s depths.
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One of these enigmas stands out among the rest: are there indeed black holes in the
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Atlantic Ocean?
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So check out my list.
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1.
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Red Tide One day, you decide to enjoy a stroll along
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the beach.
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But once you come closer to the shore, you notice something shocking - the water has
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a spine-chilling red color!
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This unusual hue is caused by algae - microscopic marine plants - blooming or rapidly growing
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in the ocean waters.
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If you think that’s nothing serious, think twice.
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During a red tide, a gallon of seawater can contain millions of algae, which is extremely
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dangerous for birds, marine animals, and even us, people! Red algae can mess with breathing,
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and eating fish and shellfish caught in the red tide can lead to bad food poisoning!
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2.
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Milky Sea Phenomenon On a dark night, you go on an ocean boat trip.
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You’re admiring the stars above your head when suddenly something draws your attention.
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You see that somewhere ahead, the ocean water is glowing with unearthly white light!
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Don't panic - you’re a fortunate witness of the milky sea phenomenon.
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The whole shining thing does look eerie but there’s nothing paranormal about it (even
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if sometimes the glowing is so bright, and its area - so large that it’s visible from
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space!).
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This phenomenon mostly happens in the Indian Ocean’s waters.
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Scientists haven't agreed yet about the source of the enigmatic glow.
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The most popular idea, though, is that the ocean starts to gleam when countless glow-in-the-dark
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bacteria gather in one place.
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But what makes them arrange such massive get-togethers?
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Still a mystery.
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3.
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Green Flashes Come to see sunset or sunrise near the ocean,
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and if you’re lucky, you may notice beautiful green flashes over the horizon.
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Why lucky?
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Because usually, these flashes don't last longer than a couple of seconds, plus, this
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phenomenon is quite rare on its own.
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You’re more likely to see green flashes at sunset than at sunrise.
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They appear when the atmosphere bends sunlight, passing through it, and separates it in different
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colors, just like a prism splits the light into tiny rainbows.
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Right at the moment when the sun is rising above the horizon or setting down, the green
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light is the most visible.
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But on very clear days, violet or blue rays can make it through the atmosphere, and you’ll
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see even more unique blue flashes instead of the green ones.
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4.
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Steaming Sea Frost smoke, sea smoke, steam fog - this phenomenon
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has many names.
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On a cold day, you can see the ocean literally smoking!
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It has nothing to do with fire though.
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The water starts to steam when the wind carrying cold air bumps into the warm humid air over
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the water surface.
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The warm air cools down almost immediately.
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The result is the very “sea smoke” which looks pretty much the same as the steam over
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a boiling kettle or your breath on a freezing cold day.
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Only on a way, way larger scale.
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5.
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Underwater Waterfalls When asked, most people will say that the
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tallest waterfall in the world is Angel Falls in Venezuela.
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Indeed, this waterfall is more than 3,000 ft high, which is way higher than the world’s
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tallest building - Burj Khalifa!
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But the world’s biggest waterfall is actually underwater c (however confusing it may sound).
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The Denmark Strait Cataract - that’s the name of this mind-boggling phenomenon - lies
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beneath the Denmark Strait that separates Greenland and Denmark.
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There, the Nordic Sea’s frigid waters clash with much warmer Irminger Sea.
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The temperature difference makes the cold water flow underneath the warmer, creating
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a drop of 11,500 ft, which is just three times smaller than the Challenger Deep - the deepest
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place on Earth!
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The Denmark Strait Cataract also transports 50,000 times more water than Niagara Falls!
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6.
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The Bloop Sound For the first (and only) time, the Bloop was
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recorded in 1997.
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This minute-long, low-frequency sound was coming from the southern coast of Chile, and
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it was so deafeningly loud that underwater microphones as far as 3,000 miles away could
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hear it.
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But the most spine-chilling thing about this noise is that no one has ever heard it again.
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No wonder that people all over the world started to look for explanations: was it the call
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of a megalodon, marine dino, giant squid, or some other undiscovered sea inhabitant?
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The excitement escalated after scientists announced that the noise was 100% not human-made.
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Sci-fi lovers were unfortunately left disappointed when the mystery was solved.
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The enigmatic sound was created by a thunderous underwater icequake - the cracking of the
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ice shelf breaking up from Antarctica.
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7.
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Black Holes in the Ocean You might not need to fly to space if you
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want to take a closer look at a black hole!
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Scientists have found something very similar to black holes in the southern Atlantic Ocean!
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A black hole has such an enormous gravitational pull that once something gets pulled in, it
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doesn't have any chance to escape.
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Even light can’t get out of a black hole.
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Ocean “black holes” seem to be as powerful as their space relatives.
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But instead of catching the light, they do the same with water.
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Ocean eddies are massive whirlpools that are spinning against the main current.
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They usually swirl billions of tons of water, and most of them are larger than a city.
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These whirlpools are so powerful that nothing trapped by them can escape.
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But the scariest thing is that you might not even notice heading into one of them.
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These things are so huge that you won't spot their boundaries until it’s too late!
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Scientists, though, started to explore ocean vortices with the help of satellites.
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That’s how they discovered the borders of several eddies.
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After that, they managed to prove that mathematically, these whirlpools are the same as mysterious
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black holes in space.
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Massive eddies are surrounded by super-tight barriers where the fluid is moving in closed
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loops.
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Even water can’t get out from the inside of these loops.
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That's why tight ocean vortices kinda play the role of ginormous containers: water inside
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them can be totally different from the ocean surrounding an eddy!
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And I’m not only talking about its temperature - the salt content inside and outside a whirlpool
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often differs as well!
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Black-hole-like ocean eddies are surprisingly stable.
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That’s why they often serve as water taxis, transporting all kinds of microorganisms,
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oil, and plastic waste from one part of the ocean to another.
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8.
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Brinicles Remember icicles hanging from your house’s
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roof gutter on a sunny winter day?
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Now, imagine the same icicle but with length measuring not in inches but in feet and made
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not from rainwater but from super-salty seawater called brine.
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I’ve just described a brinicle - one of the most astounding phenomena happening in
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the bitterly cold waters of the Arctic and Antarctica.
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When surface seawater freezes and forms ice, it exudes salt.
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This makes some of the nearby water much saltier than before.
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And the saltier the water, the lower its freezing point is.
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The result is pockets of ocean brine trapped in ice packs.
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Once this ice cracks, you can observe something bizarre and amazing: the brine starts to leak
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out.
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It’s saltier and denser than the surrounding water, that’s why it starts to sink toward
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the bottom.
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Along the way, the super-cold brine comes into contact with not-so-cold water and freezes
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it.
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That’s when you can see an ice tube forming around the sinking brine!
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Congrats, you’re witnessing the appearance of a brinicle - or ice stalactite.
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It usually takes a brinicle four to twelve hours to reach the ocean floor.
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9.
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Underwater Crop Circles For the first time, underwater crop circles
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were spotted in 1995 close to Japan’s southern coast.
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Local divers called these 7-ft-wide artfully patterned structures “mystery circles.”
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The enigma had been plaguing many minds for almost 16 years until the culprit was finally
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caught.
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Imagine the researchers’ surprise when it turned out to be a male pufferfish!
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The fish needs a bit more than a week to build one circle, and the aesthetics are obviously
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crucial!
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A male is swimming inside the circle digging valleys in the sand with its fins.
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But that’s not all: the fish also use shells and corals to decorate particular parts of
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their circles!
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But the whole “build-a-circle” thing has a practical purpose as well.
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The way a male fish swims pushes the sand toward the center of the circle and creates
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a mound which later serves as a nest.
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Ah, he’s getting ready to be a daddy.
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