On exploring the oceans Robert Ballard

the first question is this our country

has to exploration programs one is NASA

with a mission to explore the great

beyond to explore the heavens which we

all want to go to if we’re lucky and you

can see we have Sputnik and we have a

Saturn and we have other manifestations

of space exploration well there’s also

another program that in another agency

within our government in ocean

exploration it’s in NOAA the National

Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

and my question is this why are we

ignoring the oceans here’s the reason

not the reason but here’s why I asked

that question if you compare NASA’s

budget annual budget to explore the

heavens that’s one year budget would

fund NOAA’s budget to explore the oceans

for 1,600 years why why are we looking

up is it because it’s heaven and hell is

down here is it a cultural issue why are

people afraid of the ocean or do they

just assume the ocean is just a dark

gloomy place that has nothing to offer

I’m going to take you on a 16-minute

trip on 72% of the planet so buckle up

okay and what we’re going to do is we’re

going to immerse ourselves in my world

and what I’m going to try to I hope I

make the following points I’m going to

make it right now in case I forget is

everything I’m going to present to you

was not in my textbooks when I went to

school and most of it was not even my

college textbooks when I’ve on

geophysicist and and I all my earth

science books when I was a student I had

to give the wrong answer to get an A we

used to ridicule continental drift it

was something we laughed at we learned

to Marshall kaise jiya synclinal cycle

which is a bunch of crap but we in

today’s context it was a bunch of crap

but it was it was the law of geology

vertical tectonics all the things we’re

going to walk through in our

explorations and discoveries of the

oceans we’re mostly discoveries made by

accident

mostly discoveries made by accident we

were looking for something found

something else and everything we’re

going to talk about represents a 1/10 of

1% glimpse because that’s all we’ve seen

I have a characterization this is a

characterization of what it would look

like if you could remove the water it

gives you the false impression it’s a

map it is not a map fact I commonly ask

people have another version of my office

and I ask people why are there mountains

here on this area here but there none

over here and they go well it’s you’d

only try to be you know the same is it a

fracture zone is it a hotspot no no

that’s the only place of ship spin most

of the southern hemisphere is unexplored

we had more exploration ships down there

during Captain Cook’s time than now it’s

amazing all right so we’re going to

immerse ourselves in the 72% of the

planet because you know it’s really

naive to think that the Easter Bunny put

all the resources on the continents you

know it’s just ludicrous the we are

always constantly playing the zero-sum

game you know you know we’re going to do

this we’re going to take it away from

something else

I believe in just a rich in the economy

and and we’re leaving so much on the

table 72% of the planet and as I will

point out later in the presentation

50% of the United States of America lies

beneath the sea 50% of our country that

we own have all legal jurisdiction have

all rights to do whatever we want lies

beneath the sea and we have better maps

of Mars than that 50% why ok now

I began my explorations the hard way

back then this was actually my first

expedition was I was 17 years old was 49

years ago do the math I’m I’m 66 and I

went out to sea on a script ship and we

almost got sunk by a giant rogue wave

and I was too young to be it you know I

thought it was a great out of the body

surfer and I don’t walk that was an

incredible wave and we almost sank the

ship but I became enraptured with

mounting expeditions and over the last

49 years I’ve done about a hundred and

twenty twenty-one to keep doing them

expeditions but in the early days the

only way I could get to the bottom was

to crawl into a submarine a very small

submarine and go down to the bottom I

dove in a whole series of different deep

diving submersibles Alvin and see cliff

and Siana and all the major deep

submersibles we have which are about

eight in fact on a good day on a good

day we might have four or five human

beings at the average depth of the earth

maybe four or five human beings out of

whatever billions we’ve got going and so

it’s it’s very difficult to get there if

you do it physically but I was

enraptured back in my graduate years was

the dawn of plate tectonics and we

realized that the greatest mountain

range on earth lied beneath the sea the

mid-ocean ridge runs around like the

seaman of baseball this is on a on a

Makita projection but if you were to put

it on an equal area projection you’d see

that the mid-ocean ridge covers 23% of

the Earth’s total surface area almost a

quarter of our planet is a single

mountain range and we didn’t enter it

until after Neil Armstrong and Buzz

Aldrin went to the moon so we went to

the moon played golf up there before we

went to the largest feature on our own

planet and our interest in this mountain

ranges are scientists in those days was

not only because of its tremendous size

dominating the planet but the role it

plays in the genesis of the Earth’s

outer skin because it’s along the axis

of the mid-ocean ridge where the great

crustal plates are separating and like a

living organism you tear open it bleeds

its molten blood rises up to heal that

wound from the asthenosphere hardens

forms new tissue and moves laterally but

no one had actually gone down into the

actual site of boundary of creation as

we called it into the Rift Valley till a

group of seven of us

crawled in our little submarines in the

summer of 1973 1974 and we’re the first

human beings to enter the Great Rift

Valley we went down into the Rift Valley

this is the all accurate except for one

thing it’s pitch black

it’s absolutely pitch black because

photons cannot reach the average depth

of the ocean which is 12,000 feet in the

Rift Valley it’s 9,000 feet most of our

planet does not feel the warmth of the

Sun most of our planet is in eternal

darkness and in that for that reason you

do not have photosynthesis of the deep

sea with the absence of photosynthesis

you have no plant life and as a result

you have very little animal life living

in this underworld or so we thought and

so in our initial explorations we were

totally focused on exploring the

boundary of creation looking at the

volcanic features running along that

entire 42,000 miles running along this

entire 42,000 miles are tens of

thousands of active volcanoes tens of

thousands of active volcanoes there are

more active volcanoes beneath the sea

than on land by two orders of magnitude

so it’s a phenomenally active region

it’s not just a you know dark boring

place it’s a very alive place and it’s

then being ripped open but we were

dealing with a particular scientific

issue back then we couldn’t understand

why you had a mountain under tension we

in plate tectonic theory we knew that if

you had plates collide it made sense

they would they would crush into one

another you would thicken the crust

you’d uplift it that’s why you get you

know you get seashells up on Mount

Everest it’s not a flood it was pushed

up there

we understood mountains under

compression but we could not understand

why we had a mountain under tension

should not be until one of my colleagues

said it looks to me like a thermal

blister and the mid-ocean ridge must be

a cooling curve we said let’s go find

out we punched a bunch of heat probes

everything made sense except that the

axis there was missing heat there was

missing heat it was hot it wasn’t hot

enough so we came up with multiple

hypotheses there’s little green people

down there taking it there’s all sorts

of things going on but the only logical

was that there were hot springs that

there must be underwater hot springs we

mounted an expedition to look for the

missing heat and so we went along this

mountain range in an area along the

Galapagos rift and did we find the

missing heat it was amazing these giant

chimneys

huge giant chimneys went up to them with

our submersible we want to get a

temperature probe we stuck it in there

looked at it with pegged off-scale pilot

made this great observation that’s hot

then we realized our probe was made out

of the same stuff it could have melted

but it turns out the exiting temperature

with 650 degrees Fahrenheit hot enough

to melt lead this is what a real one

looks like on the one to Foucault Ridge

what you’re looking at is incredible

pipe organ of chemicals coming out of

the ocean everything you see in this

picture is commercial grade copper lead

silver zinc and gold so the Easter Bunny

has put things in the ocean floor and

you have massive heavy metal deposits

that we’re making in this mountain range

we’re making huge discoveries of large

commercial grade ore along this mountain

range but it was dwarfed was dwarfed by

what we discovered we discovered a

profusion of life in a world that it

should not exist giant tubeworms ten

feet tall I remember having to use vodka

my own vodka to pick a liquor they don’t

carry formaldehyde we went and found

these incredible clam beds sitting on

the barren Rock large clams and when we

opened them they didn’t look like a clam

and when we cut them open they didn’t

have the anatomy of a clan no mouth no

gut no digestive system they had inside

them their body said had been totally

taken over by another organism a

bacterium that had figured out how to

replicate photosynthesis in the dark

through a process we now call

chemosynthesis

none of it in our textbooks none of us

in our textbooks or that we did not know

about this life system we were not

predicting it we stumbled on it looking

for some missing heat so we wanted to

accelerate this process we wanted to get

away from the silly trip up and down on

a submarine average depth of the ocean

12,000 feet to an F hours to get to work

in the morning

two-and-a-half hours to get to home five

hour commute to work three hours of

bottom time average distance traveled

one mile on a 42,000 mile mountain range

great job security but not the way to go

so I began designing a new technology of

telepresence using robotic systems to

replicate myself so I wouldn’t have to

cycle my vehicle system we began to

introduce that in our explorations and

we continue to make phenomenal

discoveries with our new robotic

technologies again looking for something

else moving from one part of the

mid-ocean ridge to another we were

the scientists were off watch and they

came across incredible life-forms they

came across new creatures they had not

seen before but more importantly they

discovered edifices down there that they

did not understand that it did not did

not make sense they were not above a

magma chamber they shouldn’t be there

and we called it lost city and lost city

was characterized by these incredible

climb stone formations and upside down

of pools look at that how do you do that

that’s water upside down we we went in

underneath it tapped it and we found

that it had the pH of Drano the pH of 11

and yet it had chemosynthetic bacteria

living in it end at this extreme

environment enough hydrothermal vents

were in an acidic environment all the

way at the other end in an alkaline

environment at a pH of 11 a life existed

so life was much more creative than we

had ever thought again discovered by

accident just two years ago working off

Santorini where people are sunning

themselves on the beach unbeknownst to

them in caldera nearby we found

phenomenal hydrothermal vent systems and

another more life systems this was two

miles from where people go to sunbathe

and they were oblivious to the existence

of this system again you know we stopped

at the water’s edge recently diving off

in the Gulf of Mexico

finding a pools of water this time not

upside down right side up bingo it’s

it’s it’s out you think you’re in error

until your fish swims by you’re looking

at you’re looking at brine pools formed

by salt dye appears near that was

methane was I never seen volcanoes of

methane instead of belching out lava

they were belching out big big bubbles

of methane and they were creating these

volcanoes and there were flows not of

lava but of the mud coming out of the

earth but driven by meth never seen this

before moving on there’s more than just

natural history that beneath the sea

human history our discoveries of the

Titanic the realization that the

deep-sea is the largest museum on earth

it contains more history than all the

museum’s on land combined and yet we’re

only now penetrating it finding that the

state of preservation we found the

Bismarck in 16,000 feet

we then found the Yorktown people always

ask did you find the right ship this

said Yorktown on the stern more recently

finding ancient history

how many ancient mariners have had a bad

day the numbers of million we’ve been

discovering these along ancient trade

routes where they’re not supposed to be

the shipwrecks thanked hundred years

before the birth of Christ

this one sank carrying a prefabricated

home depot Roman temple and then here’s

one that sank at the time of Homer at

750 BC more recently into the Black Sea

where we’re exploring because there’s no

oxygen there it’s it’s it’s the largest

reservoir of hydrogen sulfide on earth

shipwrecks are perfectly preserved all

their organics are perfectly preserved

we begin to excavate them we expect to

start hauling out the bodies in perfect

condition with their DNA look at the

state of preservation still the ad mark

of a carpenter’s look at the state of

those artifacts you still see the

beeswax dripping when they drop they

sealed it this ship sank 1500 years ago

fortunately we’ve been able to convince

Congress we begin to go on the hill and

lobby and we stole recently a ship from

the United States Navy the Okeanos

Explorer in its mission its mission is

as good as you could get its mission is

to go where no one has gone before on

planet Earth and it’s I was looking at

it yesterday it’s up in Seattle okay it

comes online it comes online this summer

and it begins its journey of exploration

but we have no idea what we’re going to

find when we go out there with our

technology but certainly it’s going to

be going to the unknown America this is

at that part of the United States that

lies beneath the sea we own all of that

blue and yet like I say particularly the

west and territorial trust we don’t have

maps of them we don’t have maps of them

we have maps of Venus but not of the

western territorial trust the way we’re

going to run this we have no idea what

we’re going to discover we have no idea

what we’re going to discover going to

discover it an ancient shipwreck of

Phoenicians off Brazil or a new rock

formation a new life so we’re going to

run it like an emergency hospital we’re

going to connect our command center via

high bandwidth satellite link to a

building we’re building at the

University of Rhode Island called the

inner space Center

and within that we’re going to run it

just like you run a nuclear submarine

blew goal team switching them off and on

running 24 hours a day a discovery is

made that discovery is instantly seen in

the command center a second later but

then it’s connected through Internet to

the new internet highway that makes

internet one look like a dirt road on

the information highway with 10 gigabits

a bandwidth will go into areas we have

no knowledge of it’s a big blank sheet

on our planet will map it within hours

have the maps disseminated out to the

major universities it turns out that 90%

of all the oceanographic intellect in

this country are at 12 universities

they’re all on i2 we can then build a

command center this is a remote Center

at the University of Washington she’s

talking to the pilot

she’s 5,000 miles away but she’s assumed

command but the beauty of this too is we

can then disseminate it to children we

can disseminate they can follow this

expedition I’ve started a program thing

where you Jim Jim Young who helped we

start a program called the Jason project

more recently we’ve started a program

with the Boys and Girls Clubs of America

so that we can use exploration and and

the excitement of live exploration to

motivate them and excite them and then

give them what they’re already ready for

I would not let an adult drive my robot

you don’t have enough gaming experience

but I will let it kid with no license

take over control of my vehicle system

because we want to create we want to

create the classroom of tomorrow we have

stiff competition and we need to

motivate and it’s all being done if that

your win or lose an engineer or a

scientist by the eighth grade the game

is not over it’s over by the eighth

grade it’s not beginning we need to be

not only proud of our universities we

need to be proud of our middle schools

and when we have the best middle schools

in the world we’ll have the best kids

pumped out of that system let me tell

you because this is what we want

this is what we want this is a young

lady not watching a football game not

watching a basketball game watching

exploration live from thousands of miles

away and it’s just dawning on her what

she’s seen and when you get a jaw drop

you can inform you can put so much

information into that mind it’s in full

reset mode and that’s this this I hope

this I hope will be a future engineer or

a future scientist in the battlefield

for truth and my final question my final

question why are we not looking at

moving out onto the sea why do we have

programs to build a habitation on Mars

and we have programs to look at

colonizing the moon but we do not have a

program looking at how we colonize our

own planet and the technology is at hand

thank you very much

thank you thank you

第一个问题是我们的国家

必须进行探索计划一个是美国宇航局

,其任务是探索

更远的地方,探索我们都想去的天堂,

如果我们幸运的话,你

会看到我们有人造卫星和

土星 我们还有其他

太空探索的表现形式还有

另一个计划,

在我们政府的另一个海洋探索机构中,

它在国家

海洋和大气管理局的国家海洋和大气管理局

,我的问题是为什么我们

在这里忽略海洋,原因

不是原因,而是 这就是为什么我问

这个问题如果你比较美国宇航局的

预算年度预算来探索

天堂那一年的预算将

资助美国国家海洋和大气管理局的预算来探索

海洋 1600 年为什么我们要抬头看

是因为它是天堂而地狱就

在这里 一个文化问题为什么

人们害怕海洋,或者他们

只是认为海洋只是一个黑暗

阴沉的地方,没有什么可提供的,

我要带你去 你在

地球上 72% 的地方进行了 16 分钟的旅行,所以系

好安全带,我们要做的是

让自己沉浸在我的世界

和我要尝试的事情中 我希望我

能做到 以下几点我

现在要做,以防我忘记

了我要呈现给你的所有东西

在我上学时都没有出现在我的

课本上

地球物理学家和我所有的地球

科学书籍,当我还是学生的时候,我

不得不给出错误的答案才能得到一个 A 我们

曾经嘲笑大陆漂移这

是我们嘲笑的东西 我们学会

了马歇尔 kaise jiya 向斜循环

,这是一堆 废话,但我们在

今天的情况下,这是一堆废话,

但这是地质学

垂直构造定律

我们在

探索和发现

海洋中要经历的所有事情我们大多是偶然发现的

偶然发现我们

正在寻找一些发现的

东西 否则,我们

将要谈论的所有内容都代表 1% 的 1/10,

因为这就是我们所看到的所有

内容 错误的印象 它是一张

地图 它不是一张地图 事实上我通常会问

人们有另一个版本的我的

办公室我问人们为什么

这里这个区域有山但

这里没有而且他们进展顺利这是你

只会尝试 是你知道的一样 它是一个

断裂带 它是一个热点 不不

那是唯一的船舶旋转的地方

南半球的大部分地区都是未开发的

我们

在库克船长的时代有更多的探索船比现在

太棒了 所以我们 ‘要

沉浸在地球的 72% 中,

因为你知道

认为复活节兔子把

所有资源都放在你知道的大陆上

是很幼稚的

知道你知道我们会这样做,

我们将把它从

其他东西

中拿走

稍后在演示文稿中指出

50% 的美利坚合众国位于

海底 我们拥有的 50% 的国家

拥有所有法律管辖权

有权为所欲为 位于

海底 我们拥有比

火星更好的地图 那 50% 为什么现在

我开始了我的探索艰难的

道路那时这实际上是我的第一次

探险是我 17 岁是 49

年前做数学我是 66 我

根据剧本出海 船,我们

几乎被巨大的流氓海浪击沉

,我太年轻了,你知道我

认为这是一个伟大的身体

冲浪者,我不走路那是一个

令人难以置信的波浪,我们几乎沉没了

船但是

越来越多的探险让我着迷,在过去的

49 年里,我完成了大约

120 次 21 继续进行

探险,但在早期,

我能到达海底的唯一方法

是爬进一艘潜艇,一艘很小的

潜艇,然后下到海底我

潜入了一系列不同的深潜潜水器 Alvin 看看悬崖

和 Siana 以及

我们拥有的所有主要深潜器,实际上大约有

8 个,在一个好的日子里,在一个好的

日子里,我们可能有四五个人

在地球的平均深度,

也许有四五个人

无论我们有数十亿的努力,所以

如果你身体力行的话,很难到达那里

,但

我在研究生的时候很高兴

是板块构造的黎明,我们

意识到地球上最大的

山脉位于海底

大洋中脊像棒球海员一样四处奔波

这是在

牧田投影上,但如果你把

它放在等面积投影上,你会看到

大洋中脊覆盖

了地球总表面的 23%

我们星球几乎四分之一的区域是一个单一的

山脉,

直到尼尔阿姆斯特朗和巴兹

奥尔德林登月之后我们才进入它,所以我们

去月球打高尔夫球,然后

我们自己去最大的特征

那个星球和我们对这个山脉的兴趣是当时的科学家们,

不仅因为它巨大的大小

主宰着地球,而且因为它

在地球外皮的起源中所起的作用,

因为它沿着

大洋中脊的轴,在那里 巨大的

地壳板块正在分离,就像一个

活生生的有机体,你撕开它它会流血,

它融化的血液上升以治愈

软流圈的伤口硬化

形成新的组织并横向移动,但

没有人真正进入

创造边界的实际位置

1973 年夏天,1974 年夏天,我们把它称为东非大裂谷,直到我们七个人爬进我们的小潜艇,我们是第一个

进入东非大裂谷的人类

我们进入裂谷,

这是所有准确的,除了一

件事它是漆黑的

它绝对是漆黑的,因为

光子无法到达裂谷

12,000 英尺的海洋的平均深度

它是 9,000 英尺,我们

星球的大部分地区都没有 感受太阳的温暖

我们这个星球的大部分地区都处于永恒的

黑暗中,因此你

没有

深海的光合作用,没有光合作用,

你就没有植物生命,因此

你几乎没有动物生命

在这个地下世界中,我们认为,

所以在我们最初的探索中,我们

完全专注于探索

创造的边界,看着

沿着

整个 42,000 英里延伸的火山特征 沿着这整个 42,000 英里运行的

数以万计的活火山 数以万计

海下的活火山

比陆地上的活火山多两个数量级,

所以它是一个非常活跃的地区 n

这不仅仅是一个你知道的黑暗无聊的

地方它是一个非常有活力的地方然后它

被撕开但是我们当时正在

处理一个特定的科学

问题我们无法理解

为什么你有一座处于紧张状态的山我们

在板块构造理论中我们 知道如果

你有板块碰撞它是有道理的,

它们会相互挤压

你会加厚地壳

你会抬高它这就是为什么你

知道你在珠穆朗玛峰上得到了贝壳

这不是洪水而是被推

到那里

我们了解受压的山脉,

但我们无法理解

为什么我们的山脉不应该受到压力,

直到我的一位同事

说它在我看来就像一个热

泡,而大洋中脊一定是

一条冷却曲线,我们说让我们去寻找

出来我们打了一堆热探针

一切都有意义,除了

轴那里缺少热量那里

缺少热量它很热它还不够热

所以我们提出了多个

假设有littl 那里的绿色人

在那里发生了各种各样

的事情,但唯一合乎逻辑

的是那里有温泉,

一定有水下温泉我们

进行了一次探险以寻找

丢失的热量,所以我们沿着这条

山脉 加拉帕戈斯裂谷沿线的一个区域

,我们是否找到了

丢失的热量?这些巨大的

烟囱

巨大的巨大烟囱用

我们的潜水器向它们上升我们想要一个

温度探头,我们把它插

在那里用固定的超标飞行员观察它

做了这个很热的很棒的观察

然后我们意识到我们的探头是由

它可能融化的相同材料制成的,

但事实证明

,650华氏度的退出温度

足以融化铅,这就是真正的探头的

样子 Foucault Ridge

你看到的是令人难以置信

的化学管风琴从

海洋中出来你在这张照片中看到的一切

都是商业级铜铅

银锌和金所以 t 他复活节

兔子把东西放在海底,

你有大量的重金属矿床

,我们正在这个山脉中开采我们正在

沿着这条山脉大量发现大型商业级矿石,

但它相形见绌,

我们的东西相形见绌 发现我们

在一个不应该存在的世界中发现了丰富的生命

英尺高的巨型管虫 我记得不得不用伏特加

我自己的伏特加来挑选不含甲醛的酒

我们去了,发现

这些令人难以置信的蛤蜊床

坐在 贫瘠的岩石大蛤蜊,当我们

打开它们时,它们看起来不像蛤蜊

,当我们将它们切开时,它们

没有氏族的解剖结构,没有嘴,没有

内脏,没有消化系统,

它们的体内据说完全没有

被另一种生物接管了一种

细菌,它已经知道如何

通过我们现在称之为

化学

合成的过程在黑暗中复制

光合作用 不

知道这个生命系统我们没有

预测到它我们偶然发现它正在

寻找一些丢失的热量所以我们想要

加速这个过程我们想要

摆脱在

平均海洋深度

12,000 英尺的潜艇上上下的愚蠢旅行 到 F 小时

早上上班

两个半小时到家 五个

小时通勤上班 三个小时的

最低时间 平均距离

在 42,000 英里的山脉上行驶一英里

工作保障很好,但不是 路要走,

所以我开始

使用机器人系统设计一种远程呈现新技术来

复制自己,这样我就不必

循环我的车辆系统我们开始

在我们的探索中引入它,

我们继续

用我们的新机器人

技术做出惊人的发现 寻找

从大洋中脊的一个部分移动到另一个部分的其他东西

我们

是科学家们不在监视他们

遇到了令人难以置信的生命形式他们

遇到了新的生物他们 以前没

见过,但更重要的是,他们

在下面发现了他们

不理解的建筑物,这

没有任何意义,他们不在

岩浆房上方,他们不应该在那里

,我们称之为失落之城,失落之城

的特点是 这些令人难以置信的

攀爬石结构和倒置

的水池 看看你是怎么做到的

那是倒置的水 我们进入

它下面轻敲它,我们

发现它的 pH 值为 Drano 的 pH 值为 11

,但它有化学合成细菌

生活在这个极端的

环境中,有足够多的热液喷口

一直处于酸性环境中

,而另一端则

处于 pH 值为 11 的碱性环境中

就在两年前

,人们在圣托里尼岛

附近的火山口不为人知的海滩上晒太阳,我们发现了

惊人的热液喷口系统和

另一个 更多生命系统 这

距离人们晒日光浴的地方只有两英里

,他们

又一次忘记了这个系统的存在 你知道我们

最近在墨西哥湾潜水时在水边停了下来,

这次没有倒置的水池

正面朝上宾果游戏它是

它它是它你认为你错了

直到你的鱼游过你

看着你看着

盐染料形成的盐水池出现在附近那是

甲烷是我从未见过

甲烷火山而不是 喷出熔岩

他们喷出巨大

的甲烷气泡 他们正在制造这些

火山 不是

熔岩而是泥浆从

地球上流出 但由冰毒驱动

在继续前进之前从未见过这种情况 不仅仅是

自然历史 在海底

人类历史我们对

泰坦尼克号的发现认识到

深海是地球上最大的博物馆

它包含的历史比所有

陆地博物馆的总和还要多 我们

现在才深入了解它

的保存状态 我们

在 16,000 英尺处发现了俾斯麦号

然后我们找到了约克镇 人们总是

问你是否找到了合适的船 这

说约克镇在船尾 最近

发现古代历史 有

多少古代水手 有一个糟糕的

一天,我们在古老的贸易路线上发现了数以百万计的人

,他们不应该是

在基督诞生前一百年感谢的沉船,

这艘沉没了,带着一个预制的

家庭仓库罗马神庙,然后这是

一个 它在

公元前 750 年的荷马时代沉入了

我们正在探索的黑海,因为那里没有

氧气,它是地球上最大

的硫化氢水库

沉船被完美保存

所有有机物都被完美保存

我们开始 挖掘它们,我们希望

开始将

它们的 DNA 完好无损的尸体拖出 看看

保存状态仍然是广告

木匠的标志 看看

那些文物的状态 你仍然看到

蜂蜡在它们掉落时滴落 他们将其

密封 这艘船在 1500 年前沉没

幸运的是我们已经能够说服

国会我们开始上山和

游说然后我们偷了 最近,

美国海军的一艘船 Okeanos

Explorer 正在执行它的任务

,它的任务是尽你所能,它的任务是

去地球上以前没有人去过

的地方,我昨天在看

它,它在西雅图,好吧 它上

线它今年夏天上线

,它开始了它的探索之旅,

但我们不知道

当我们带着我们的技术去那里时会发现什么,

但它肯定

会去到未知的美国

。 位于海底的美国的一部分,

我们拥有所有的

蓝色,但就像我说的那样,特别是

西方和领土信托,我们没有它们的

地图我们没有它们的

地图我们有金星的地图,但没有 的

西方领土信任 我们

将要运行的方式 我们不知道

我们会发现

什么 我们不知道我们会发现什么 会

发现它

巴西附近腓尼基人的古代沉船或新岩石

形成一个新的生命,所以我们要

像急诊医院一样经营它 我们

要通过

高带宽卫星链路将我们的指挥中心连接

到我们在罗德岛大学建造的一座

叫做

内太空中心的建筑物

,在里面 我们将

像运行核潜艇一样运行

新的互联网高速公路让

互联网看起来像一条土

路 信息高速公路上有 10 吉比特

的带宽将进入我们

不知道的区域 它是我们星球上的一张大白纸

在几个小时

内将地图分发给

主要大学 结果证明这个国家

所有海洋学知识的 90%

都在 12 所大学

他们都在 i2 我们可以建立一个

指挥中心 这是大学的一个远程中心

华盛顿的她正在

和 5,000 英里外的飞行员交谈,

但她已担任

指挥,但这样做的美妙之处在于我们

可以将它传播给孩子们,我们

可以传播他们可以跟随这次

远征 我已经开始了一个计划

,你是 Jim Jim Young 帮助我们

启动了一个名为 Jason 项目的计划

最近我们

与美国男孩女孩俱乐部启动了一个计划,

以便我们可以利用探索和

现场探索的兴奋来

激励他们并激发他们,然后

给他们他们想要的东西 ‘已经准备好

我不会让成年人驾驶我的机器人

你没有足够的游戏经验

但我会让没有执照的孩子

接管我的车辆系统

因为 e 我们想要创造 我们想要

创造明天的教室 我们有

激烈的竞争,我们需要

激励,如果

你在八年级之前赢或输了工程师或

科学家,

这一切都已经完成 八

年级 这还没有开始 我们

不仅要为我们的大学感到自豪 我们还

需要为我们的中学感到自豪

当我们拥有世界上最好的中学

时,我们将把最好的孩子

从这个系统中抽出来让我 告诉

你,因为这就是我们想要的

这就是我们想要的 这是一位年轻的

女士 不看足球比赛 不

看篮球比赛 观看

数千英里外的现场直播,

她刚刚开始了解

她所看到的以及当你得到一个 下巴,

你可以告诉你可以把这么多的

信息放进那个

头脑中 我的最后一个

问题为什么我们不考虑

搬到海上为什么我们有

在火星上建造居住地的

计划,我们有研究

殖民月球的计划,但我们没有

研究如何殖民

自己的星球的计划 技术在手

,非常

感谢,谢谢