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The ocean is deep, vast, and scary. Who knows what lurks in those crystal marine waters? In fact, much remains to be learned from exploring the mysteries of the deep since more than eighty percent of it remains unmapped, unobserved, and unexplored.
Imagine that the lowest point on Earth, the Challenger Deep section of the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean, sits at a staggering 36,000 feet below sea level. The depth could engulf the summit of Mount Everest plus 7,000 feet added on top of it.It’s also the home of some of the most frightening-looking deep sea creatures like frilled sharks and giant tube worms.
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But for some people, the fear of underwater depths is so strong, it actually qualifies as a phobia on its own. Known as “thalassophobia,” which stems from the Greek thalassa ("the sea") and phobos ("fear"), it is characterized by intense and persistent fear of deep bodies of ocean.
According to Very Well Mind, this phobia is different from aquaphobia, the fear of water, because thalassophobia centers on bodies of water that seem vast, dark, deep, and dangerous.
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Meanwhile, some ocean mysteries are so spine-chilling they can easily crack the bravest of us. You've probably heard of the Bermuda Triangle, where a US Navy ship disappeared in 1918 with 300 crew members. In 1945, five navy bombers vanished while flying over the area. Just the thought of it combined with how little we know of the deep waters is enough to make one's stomach turn.
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