The Reason We Can’t Find MH 370 Is That We’re Basically Blind

Men have played golf on the moon. Images transmitted from the surface of Mars have become utterly commonplace. The Hubble Space Telescope can see 10 billion to 15 billion light-years into the universe. MoreMen Charged With Toppling Ancient Rock Formation Avoid Jail Time Huffington PostHere's An Updated Tally Of All The People Who Have Ever Died From A Marijuana Overdose Huffington PostLindsay Lohan Reveals She Had a Miscarriage PeopleBlazers force overtime, edge Rockets 122-120 to take Game 1 Sports Illustrated'Game of Thrones' recap: 'Breaker of Chains' Entertainment WeeklyBut a mere three miles under the sea? That’s a true twilight zone. As the hunt for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 demonstrates, at that depth — minuscule compared with the vastness of space — everything is a virtual unknown. A high-tech unmanned underwater submarine, Bluefin-21, has been dispatched four times to look for wreckage from the jet, but the crushing water pressure and impenetrability of this void mean that only its most recent pair of missions were completed. Scrutinizing dust and rock particles on the Red Planet, tens of millions of miles away, is a breeze. Understanding what’s on the seafloor of our own planet is not. About 95% of deep ocean floor remains unmapped, but that’s almost certainly where the most sought after aircraft in history is going to be found. “Our knowledge of the detailed ocean floor is very, very sparse,” Erik van Sebille, an oceanographer at the Un...
Source: TIME: Top Science and Health Stories - Category: Science Authors: Tags: Uncategorized Aviation Environment exploration garbage patches Malaysia Airlines missing jet MH370 sea waste tragedy Source Type: news