Deepest submariner dies
November 8th, 2008
Swiss scientist and underwater explorer Jacques Piccard, who made the deepest-ever manned dive to 11km in the western Pacific’s Mariana Trench, has died.
Piccard, who died at his home on Lake Geneva, aged 86, made the dive in the Trieste bathyscaphe, a submersible co-developed with his famous balloonist father, Auguste Piccard, who first took a hot-air balloon into the stratosphere.
After some initial dives in the Atlantic, the Piccards’ sub was taken on by the US Navy, the resources of which were used to improve the design. Then came the stunning Mariana Trench dive, made with co-pilot Don Walsh, a US Navy lieutenant.
The pair descended 10,916m to the bottom of Mariana, the deepest point on the Earth’s crust. They made discoveries of deep ocean life which helped bring to an end the dumping of nuclear waste in deep oceanic areas.
“By far the most interesting find was the fish that came floating by our porthole,” Piccard said. “We were astounded to find higher marine-life forms down there at all.”
Piccard later worked for Nasa in deep-sea exploration. He built four medium-depth submarines, including the world’s first tourist submarine, revealed at the 1964 Swiss National Exhibition. This is reputed to have taken more than 30,000 passengers to the bed of Lake Geneva.
Piccard’s son Bertrand, who continued the family’s ballooning tradition by becoming the first person to fly a hot-air balloon around the world without stopping, described his father as “a true Captain Nemo”, in reference to Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under The Sea.
He had gained from his father “a sense of curiosity, a desire to mistrust dogmas and common assumptions, a belief in free will and confidence in the face of the unknown”.
Source: Divenet








