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Encyclopedia :
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Bathyscaphe Trieste |
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Bathyscaphe TriesteTrieste was a deep-diving research bathyscaphe ("deep boat") with a crew of two. Designed by the Swiss scientist Auguste Piccard, she was launched in August 1953 in the Mediterranean near Naples, Italy. She was purchased by the U.S. Navy in 1958 for $250,000. The Trieste basically consisted of a float filled with gasoline and a separate pressure sphere. This sphere (called bathysphere by Piccard) provided just enough room for two persons and was built by the Krupp Steel Works of Essen, Germany. To withstand the staggering pressure of 9 tons per square inch (124 MPa) at the bottom of Challenger Deep, the new sphere's walls were 5 inches (127 mm) thick. It weighed 13 tons in air, 8 in water. Transported to a new base at San Diego, she was extensively modified and then used in a series of deep-submergence tests in the Pacific Ocean during the next few years, including a dive to the Mariana Trench, the deepest known part of the ocean, in January 1960. Trieste departed San Diego on October 5, 1959 on the way to Guam by the freighter Santa Maria to participate in Project Nekton -a series of very deep dives in the Marianas Trench. On January 23, 1960, she reached a record depth of 35,813 feet (10.92 km) in the Challenger Deep, carrying Jacques Piccard (son of Auguste) and Lieutenant Don Walsh, USN. The descent took almost five hours and the two men spent barely twenty minutes on the ocean floor before undertaking the 3 hour 15 minute ascent. They observed small soles and flounders and noted the floor consisted of diatomaceous ooze while on the bottom.
Trieste is a permanent exhibit at the Navy Museum in Washington, DC.
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