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VAR 3.5°5'E (2015) ANNUAL DECREASE 8' Edit. Map with JOSM Remote; View. Weather; Sea Marks; Harbours; Sport; Aerial photo; Coordinate Grid
- Weather
Time (UTC) + – i
- License
All Data of the base map is created by the...
- Openseamap
OpenSeaMap - die freie Seekarte, nach dem Wiki-Prinzip, auf...
- Sea Marks
North cardinal mark: East cardinal mark: South cardinal...
- Tidal Scale
Map Key. Harbour; Sea Marks; Lights; Bridges/Locks; Help
- Water Depth
We would like to show you a description here but the site...
- Website
Map Key. Harbour; Sea Marks; Lights; Bridges/Locks; Help
- Harbour
Harbour Master: Waste Disposal
- Weather
Yet, beneath its tranquil surface, the Pacific Ocean boasts the Mariana Trench, the Earth’s deepest point, plunging to unfathomable depths. The ocean is also home to some of the world’s most stunning scenery, from the blue waters and white sand beaches of Hawaii .
"The Five Deeps" refers to the deepest point in each of the planet's five oceans: the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean, the Puerto Rico Trench in the Atlantic Ocean, the Java Trench in the Indian Ocean, the South Sandwich Trench in the Southern Ocean, and the Molloy Hole in the Arctic Ocean.
The trench is the deepest point in the world’s oceans. It reaches a length of 1,580 miles and 2,550 kilometers and a maximum width of 69 kilometers or 43 miles. The maximum known depth within the Challenger Deep is 10,984 meters or 36,037 feet.
Windows PC, Notebook, Tablet. The NMEA-Datalogger is chart plotter and shows the chart togeter with navigation data received by WLAN. Charts will be stored in the cache and can be used offline later. Additionally we can logging water depths, for building depth contour lines.
The Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench is the deepest known point in Earth's oceans. In 2010 the United States Center for Coastal & Ocean Mapping measured the depth of the Challenger Deep at 10,994 meters (36,070 feet) below sea level with an estimated vertical accuracy of ± 40 meters.
Map showing the global location of the five deepest point of the five oceans. All data sourced from the Global Multi-Resolution Topography Synthesis (Ryan et al., 2009).