Taam Ja’ Blue Hole took over the title of the world’s deepest blue hole — an underwater sinkhole — on April 29, a paper in Frontiers in Marine Science announced.
The discovery of the world’s deepest blue hole in Mexico’s Chetumal Bay has captivated the attention of geologists, marine biologists, and adventurers alike.This underwater sinkhole, known as ...
The "Taam Ja' Blue Hole," located in Chetumal Bay in Mexico, is now recognized as the deepest underwater blue hole ever identified with a recorded depth of at least 1,378 feet (420 meters) below sea ...
A bottomless pit? For now, it appears that way. A team of oceanographers from several Mexican institutions say the Taam Ja' Blue Hole (TJBH) is the deepest in the world. It's located in Chetumal ...
Scientists have unveiled what might be the deepest known blue hole on Earth, a mysterious abyss named the Taam Ja’ Blue Hole (TJBH), located in Chetumal Bay off the Yucatan Peninsula. This ...
In our top stories this week, reporter Passant Rabie describes the rediscovery of a satellite lost in the 1990s and why we sometimes lose sight of our orbital property. Researchers have discovered ...
TUCKED deep inside the Arctic Circle lies an abandoned Soviet base that is home to the world's deepest manmade hole dubbed "Well to Hell". Located in northwestern Russia near the Norwegian border ...
Researchers have found a blue hole they say is the deepest in the world—and they’ve yet to find where it bottoms out. The formation is the Taam Ja’ Blue Hole in Mexico’s Chetumal Bay, and ...
It should be no surprise that our 2024 ranking of America’s 100 Greatest Golf Holes, the first of its kind since 1999, is ...
One of the deepest holes into the earth’s crust is in Oklahoma! Bertha Rogers hole is in Washita County. According to an article from Greedy Finance, the scientific community is still learning ...
It's coming! Godzilla is making his splash into the world of Dave the Diver on May 23 in the time-limited free-to-play DLC.
Researchers described how the underwater abyss’s extensive depths could harbour a “biodiversity to be explored” in a recent study published in the journal Frontiers in Marine Science.