TOKYO (AP) - A Japanese deep-sea drilling probe has set a new world
record for depth, reaching 7,740 meters (25,400 feet) below the sea
surface, the research institute that launched it says.
The Chikyu, operated by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and
Technology, was digging the seabed off Japan's northern coast to take
fault samples and study last year's devastating earthquake and tsunami.
The agency said Friday that the probe's drilling pipe hit the fault zone
at 6,883.5 meters (22,600 feet) undersea before reaching the target of
7,740 meters Wednesday. That's nearly 8 kilometers (5 miles) deep.
Maritime organizations say the U.S. vessel Glomar Challenger set the
previous record of 7,049.5 meters (23,130 feet) below sea surface in the
Mariana Trench in 1978.
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