How deep is the ocean?

Wreck of the <em>Titanic</em>The Titanic's bow, photographed by the remotely operated vehicle Hercules during a 2004 expedition to the wreck, which sits 12,500 feet (3,810 meters) beneath the surface of the Atlantic Ocean.

The prospect of comprehending just how vast and deep Earth’s oceans are is a challenging one. Earth’s surface is dominated by the Atlantic, Pacific, Indian, Arctic, and Southern oceans, which together cover some 71 percent of the planet and whose average collective depth is 12,100 feet (3,688 meters). Many parts of the oceans are much deeper, however, and beyond anything at normal human scales; they are so deep that comparing them with the heights of some of the world’s greatest human structures and largest well-known points of interest on Earth makes them only slightly more fathomable.

At 36,070 feet (10,994 meters) below sea level, Challenger Deep in the Pacific Ocean’s Mariana Trench is the ocean’s deepest known point. (The graphic below contrasts relative ocean depth with the sizes of various locations, structures, and feats.)

John P. Rafferty Patrick Riley