20 comments

  • apt-apt-apt-apt40 days ago
    It'd be surprising if we found it on the moon, but how is it surprising that something fell 7 miles until it hit the floor
  • hermannj31440 days ago
    For years we were told trans-oceanic communication was best done with messages in bottles and suddenly even those are being intercepted.<p>Finally time to switch to protonmail.
    • a3w40 days ago
      Depends on your thread model:<p>Swiss police can see your proton mail if they get a court to allow viewing it. But the Swiss do not have a submarine, so underwater bottle passing is safe against them.<p>Combine both, and you are safe! Offline mails in a bottle should be a april fool&#x27;s RFC any time now.
      • techjamie40 days ago
        Secure Anycast IP Over Tidal Transport
  • gnabgib40 days ago
    2020 <i>Commercial submarine trips to the bottom of the Marianas Trench</i> (103 points, 66 comments) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=22702000">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=22702000</a><p>2019 <i>Mariana Trench: Deepest-ever sub dive finds plastic bag</i> (169 points, 126 comments) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=19899374">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=19899374</a><p>2019 <i>In Mariana Trench, every animal tested had plastic in its gut</i> (57 points, 3 comments) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=19302531">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=19302531</a><p>2018 <i>Plastic Bag Found at the Bottom of World&#x27;s Deepest Ocean Trench</i> (359 points, 326 comments) <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=17057305">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;news.ycombinator.com&#x2F;item?id=17057305</a>
  • cbisnett41 days ago
    What’s the chance this was dropped off one of the research vessels at some point? It seems unlikely to drift given it sank to the bottom.
  • fnord7740 days ago
    I have a feeling someone dropped this bottle on purpose when they were over the trench. They knew what they were doing. Note the lack of other littler.
  • amelius41 days ago
    I would be more surprised if stuff like that would not find its way to places like that.
    • eimrine41 days ago
      I would like to see some movie like unresponsible guy throws his bottle to somewhere than some natural power moves it.
      • andy9941 days ago
        Isn’t that The Gods Must Be Crazy?<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.imdb.com&#x2F;title&#x2F;tt0080801&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;m.imdb.com&#x2F;title&#x2F;tt0080801&#x2F;</a>
        • dehugger40 days ago
          This is an incredible film
        • amelius40 days ago
          That was a great movie, thanks for sharing! :)
    • cap1123541 days ago
      And it&#x27;s not like there is anything (other than submersibles) that might cause it to find its way out again.
  • malux8541 days ago
    Scientists [ad] discover [ad] beer [ad] [popup] [ad] bottle in [ad] the [ad] [ad] [ad]<p>Painful
    • aorth40 days ago
      I don&#x27;t see any ads on Firefox (Android) with uBlock Origin.<p>That site seems horrible though. Random words in the body like reddit are hyperlinks to SEO landing pages on the same site. And there <i>must</i> be a better (original) source for the story than this...
      • natebc40 days ago
        <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.esri.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;industries&#x2F;blog&#x2F;articles&#x2F;mission-accomplished-photos-from-the-challenger-deep-expedition" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.esri.com&#x2F;en-us&#x2F;industries&#x2F;blog&#x2F;articles&#x2F;mission-...</a><p>Seems like this is better, or at least maybe a primary source?
      • pmdr40 days ago
        It&#x27;s peak content form that AI was trained on and is now writing itself.
    • drnick140 days ago
      You should really use an ad blocker. The Internet is basically unusable these days without one. I block ad domains at the DNS level too, but the ad blocker is still necessary to remove the empty frames left, sad.
    • add-sub-mul-div40 days ago
      If you don&#x27;t want to use an adblocker that&#x27;s your choice, but it doesn&#x27;t make complaining about it content that we want to read.
  • patrickmay40 days ago
    Time for a remake of &quot;The Gods Must Be Crazy&quot; with octopi.
    • rwmj40 days ago
      <i>octopodes</i>
  • someothherguyy41 days ago
    different source that loads without javascript <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theguardian.com&#x2F;science&#x2F;2024&#x2F;oct&#x2F;12&#x2F;oceanographer-dawn-wright-when-we-reached-the-bottom-we-saw-a-beer-bottle" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.theguardian.com&#x2F;science&#x2F;2024&#x2F;oct&#x2F;12&#x2F;oceanographe...</a><p>(lacking details on the bottle itself)
  • meisel41 days ago
    I&#x27;m curious what objects do&#x2F;don&#x27;t survive at the water pressure. I guess bottles are strong enough
    • UniverseHacker40 days ago
      Solids and liquids mostly don’t compress so as a general rule most can handle those pressures without experiencing any real mechanical stress, as they instantly provide a perfectly matching internal pressure that balances out the forces to zero.<p>It’s mostly things that contain gases that can get crushed by high pressure. Almost any type of closed cell foam for example, will either collapse to a small size or crack and crumble apart depending on how rigid it is.<p>Living things tend to get harmed by pressure changes because they have compressible gasses and&#x2F;or biological compartments that contain things that experience phase changes between gas and liquid at different pressures.
    • fogleman41 days ago
      Presumably it was open &amp; empty, so it&#x27;s just a piece of glass surviving...
      • dmurray41 days ago
        Even so, wouldn&#x27;t you expect that you could crush an open empty beer bottle by putting a heavy enough weight on it? A human can&#x27;t do it, but I would expect an elephant can.
        • bracketfocus40 days ago
          The pressure inside the bottle is the same as the outside. So it’s not the same as stomping on an empty bottle.
        • RajT8840 days ago
          There is quite a lot of pressure put outside from the beer of a full bottle, but that little bit of air is probably enough to cause it to implode at some point.<p>I&#x27;ll be honest; I have no idea how to estimate that. I&#x27;m sure there are folks on here who can (and might). It&#x27;s probably not as deep as you&#x27;d think.
          • wolvoleo40 days ago
            I&#x27;d imagine the cap will fail under the pressure long before the forces get high enough to implode the bottle.
        • jdmoreira40 days ago
          That&#x27;s not how pressure works if it&#x27;s opened. The forces balance out
        • FL41040 days ago
          But the forces are the same all around the bottle (again assuming it is open)
        • rags2riches40 days ago
          The bottle wouldn&#x27;t be empty though.
        • mihaaly40 days ago
          no
  • jordanpg41 days ago
    I agree it&#x27;s something of a bummer, but why is this surprising or &quot;bizarre&quot;?
  • anonymousiam40 days ago
    Perhaps it was tossed overboard by somebody on the support vessel...
  • sowbug40 days ago
    The article mentions thalassophobia, which is my new vocabulary word for today. It means fear of large bodies of water.
    • andy9940 days ago
      I found that to be really bad writing<p><pre><code> When it comes to exploring the deep sea, unless you suffer from thalassophobia (the fear of large bodies of water), it can be quite fascinating. </code></pre> What purpose does this serve, other than to introduce a word that has no future relevance in the article. It’s just an empty sentence padding the word count.
      • karmakurtisaani40 days ago
        How would you otherwise be aware the author knew this word?
    • nephihaha40 days ago
      Fear of the sea not large bodies of water.<p>Thalassa! Thalassa!<p>(Ancient Greek literary reference there.)
  • quinndupont40 days ago
    SO MANY ADVERTISEMENTS. Tis a shame everything has to be fluffed up and sold
    • immibis40 days ago
      We really need to do more adversarial interoperability. There should be a browser or at least a .onion site that blocks ads and bypasses paywalls.<p>Yes, it would be illegal - just like a great many good things in the past, some of which led to the law being changed.<p>The Decline of Deviance essay posted here a few days ago says people used to take legal risks a lot more often than they do today.
  • CrzyLngPwd41 days ago
    But did they pick it up?
    • bch41 days ago
      Not worth it for the $0.10 return. Put more down there to incentivize.
  • 1vuio0pswjnm740 days ago
    What beer was it
    • hulitu40 days ago
      A radler. So no technically a beer. That&#x27;s why they trew it away.
  • hulitu40 days ago
    They were lead by a bottle.
  • casey241 days ago
    Literal navalgazing
  • edwardtay40 days ago
    [dead]
    • delecti40 days ago
      The bottle in question seems to be glass, so many of those questions aren&#x27;t really relevant. Glass doesn&#x27;t degrade much from UV light, or at all from biological activity, whether on land or under 7 miles of ocean. Glass is denser than water, so it sank.
      • homebrewer40 days ago
        Because it&#x27;s an LLM spambot, it &quot;saw&quot; a couple of keywords and wrote a comment that&#x27;s vaguely relevant to the article at hand. Do help with kicking it out by flagging its comments.
        • jayrot40 days ago
          Ugh, thought at first you might be just being mean but a quick look at its other comments 100% confirms. I don’t understand — what’s even the point of such comment slop. I mean on Reddit it’s for karma and selling accounts or whatever. But here on HN?