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A quick Google search will tell you that the ocean covers approximately 71% of the Earth’s surface, spanning roughly 139 million square miles (around 361 square kilometers). And despite more than a hundred years of scientific study, there is still a lot we don’t know

Among them are some creepy facts that will likely induce a bad case of Thalassophobia. Here are some examples, as shared by people on Reddit when the topic came up in a recent thread. 

From “rogue waves” to “dark fish,” here are some of the most disturbing things shared in the discussion.

#1

A dark ocean wave cresting under a moody sky, illustrating creepy facts about the ocean's mysterious depths. We still don’t know how high waves can get.

Jack1715 , Silas Baisch/unsplash Report

David Paterson
Community Member
2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Well, we sort of do. 524 metres high.

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    #2

    Black and white image of a large ship facing an enormous ocean wave illustrating creepy facts about the ocean risks. Many of us have heard about rogue waves, but apparently there exists the complete opposite of that, a "rogue hole" which is when one is suddenly met with a gap between the ocean waves that yawns open and can dip down to possibly a 100 ft.

    I don't know why, but something tells me that if such a thing exists, it would be far more destructive and fatal compared to a rogue wave as it would seem impossible trying to maneuver out of literally being swallowed up by the ocean.

    Edit: Here's some survival stories of those who encountered this deadly phenomenon.

    Johnny Savage and the Anhinga (1998): Fisherman Johnny Savage describes encountering a "hole in the ocean" during a 350-mile trip from Key West to Cancun. He described it as a sudden, massive void ahead of them, causing the boat to fall completely off into it. The 56-foot boat was destroyed instantly, forcing Savage and his captain, Eric Bingham, into the water within minutes without any time to make a distress call or grab safety gear.

    The Rose-Noelle Crew (1989): Four sailors survived 118 days adrift off the coast of New Zealand after their trimaran was upturned by a massive, violent wave, leaving them in an inverted hull, which is a common outcome of such, a "hole" or trough-related incident.

    "Pitchpoling" off the Golden Gate: A sailor reported a "rogue hole" event during a race outside the Golden Gate, describing a sailboat dropping into a deep trough near a seamount, effectively sailing "off a cliff" and almost turning end-over-end (pitchpoling).

    Yachting World Account (1980s): A sailor described being on a vessel that was hit by a massive wave that caused the world to go black, as they were thrown into a trough so deep they were effectively trapped inside a "hole." The wheel was ripped off, and the vessel was left severely damaged, but they survived. .

    SkeletonMaze , NOAA Report

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    #3

    Close-up of strange underwater ocean formation showing unusual textures and colors as a creepy ocean fact I watched one of the David Attenborough documentaries and there’s actually a super salty lake somewhere in the ocean. It’s surrounded by all these dead fish and sea creatures because the salinity is so high it kills any living thing that ventures in it.

    Wingnut8888 , NOAA-OER/BOEMRE National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Report

    Bored Jellyfish
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Came here specifically looking for a mention of this! It’s located in the Gulf of MEXICO.

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    #4

    Two scuba divers exploring deep ocean waters above rocky coral formations with bubbles rising toward the surface. We’ve discovered entire ecosystems can exist from thermal vents at super deep depths. Places where we assumed life was impossible and they’re basically isolated alien worlds which we have only had a glimpse of.

    kingofjingling , Ekaterina Zlotnikova/unsplash Report

    Nathaniel He/Him Cis-Het
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    "Life, uh, finds a way" Dr. Ian Malcolm.

    #5

    Bioluminescent jellyfish glowing in the dark ocean, illustrating some of the creepiest facts about the ocean depths. 90% of the ocean receives zero sunlight, ever. It's 100% pitch darkness 100% of the time.

    STQCACHM , Jonathan Cooper/unsplash Report

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    #6

    Sailboat navigating rough ocean waters under a cloudy sky, highlighting the vast and mysterious ocean environment. Point Nemo. It's not a an island, just a gps location in the South Pacific. If you go there the nearest human is on the ISS.

    DepVanHalen , F**kReaperLeviathans/reddit Report

    Wyrdwoman
    Community Member
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Only if it's overhead. If its the other side of the planet I reckon you might be closer to Australia/S America /pedant :D

    #7

    A large school of small fish swimming above the ocean floor amid scattered coral and clear blue water. Diel vertical migration (DVM) is the largest daily animal migration on Earth, involving trillions of marine organisms—including zooplankton, krill, squid, and fish—moving from the deep sea to the surface at night to feed and returning to the depths by dawn. This behavior helps creatures avoid visual predators during daylight, driven by light cycles.

    chemical32 Report

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    #8

    Scuba diver exploring dark ocean depths surrounded by fish, illustrating creepy facts about the ocean environment. As soon as you go into it, you are not the top of the food chain.

    NetDork , Jesse van Vliet/unsplash Report

    Bored Jellyfish
    Community Member
    Premium
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I’m definitely not at the top of the food chain. I am the food of choice for mosquitos.

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    #9

    Scuba diver exploring deep dark ocean, highlighting creepy facts about the ocean’s mysterious depths and creatures. A guy I talked to was a deep sea diver. It gets pitch black fairly quickly when you're diving down. He said you get used to things bumping into you down there.

    Jack-of-Hearts-7 , Thant Aung/unsplash Report

    LALALand
    Community Member
    Premium
    3 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Not so sure I’d get used to it

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    #10

    A person swimming in the deep ocean, illustrating some of the creepiest facts about the ocean's vastness and mystery. When you swim in the ocean you’re moving through a bacterial soup with millions of cells per teaspoon, a large proportion of which are actively dying microbes being lysed open by viruses.

    lordofcatan10 , Roberta Sant'Anna/unsplash Report

    Bored Jellyfish
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Wait until you hear about how much bacteria already exists in the human body…

    #11

    Person wearing blue fins and a wetsuit standing on a boat deck preparing to explore the ocean depths with creepy ocean facts. The average person who is proficient in swimming can only go 20-30 feet deep without gear.

    And even with diving gear and experience- decompression sickness is no joke when it comes to deep-diving.

    Successful-Shopping8 , Kateryna Hliznitsova/unsplash Report

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    #12

    Deep-sea squid with long tentacles swimming in dark blue water, illustrating creepy facts about the ocean life. Occasionally I look through the Internet if something new was discovered. Like that nightmare bigfin squid.
    I love the ocean.

    Deqind , anon/reddit Report

    Bored Jellyfish
    Community Member
    Premium
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I remember when I first learned about salp and how wonderfully weird and cool that was. Plus, I wanted to use it as a Scrabble word and wait to be challenged over it.

    #13

    In Northern Queensland, there are several types of Cubozoa Jellyfish with deadly neurotoxins in their tentacles. They are all transparent, and several can paralyse your respiratory system within 5 minutes. One of the most lethal, the Irukandji, is not only transparent... it's smaller than your thumbnail. You literally will not know what hit you.

    dug99 Report

    #14

    Full moon glowing over dark ocean waters at night, evoking creepy facts about the ocean and its mysteries. The fact that we’ve explored more of the moon than the deep ocean will never not creep me out, especially knowing there are entire ecosystems down there we’ve barely even seen.

    HousingInner9122 , Guzmán Barquín/unsplash Report

    WindySwede
    Community Member
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The moon is smol, and not covered with water and, has no life..

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    #15

    A seagull perched on rocks near a rusted, broken piece of debris in the calm ocean water, ocean facts concept. Its sheer size and mystery. For example, MH 370 went missing back in 2014 and people scanned Indian ocean with although uncertain, but still relatively small search area. And we are yet to find the main wreckage.

    Kaggles_N533PA Report

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    #16

    Rusty abandoned shipwreck floating on clear blue ocean water under a bright sky, highlighting creepy ocean facts. The largest sunken ships aren't even a speck in their vastness.

    The Pacific is larger than every continent COMBINED, and it's surface area is greater than the surface area of Mars.

    RhysOSD , Marc Snailum/unsplash Report

    #17

    Scuba diver exploring deep dark ocean waters, highlighting some of the creepiest facts about the ocean below. At 1000 feet the ocean pressure will collapse human lungs. If somehow you can prevent that, the human body would be crushed at 20000 feet.

    Ok_Recording81 , Elion Jashari/unsplash Report

    David Paterson
    Community Member
    2 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Can prevent lung collapse using fluid breathing of perfluorocarbons, but that's so difficult to arrange that it's easier not to try.

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    #18

    Close-up of a dark striped fish in deep ocean waters representing creepy facts about the ocean's mysterious creatures. I remember reading a thread someone was joking that physics got all the good stuff and biology never had anything spooky, as a joke they said 'there's dark energy but no dark birds'

    Anyway someone responded that, apparently there's evidence of a huge amount of fish. Like the ecology suggests this huge population and there's sonar to support it but no-one has ever seen them.

    Supposedly there's 'dark fish'.

    misterjonathoncrouch Report

    David Paterson
    Community Member
    1 hour ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Particularly bristlmouths. Estimated world population is hundreds of trillions or quadrillions of individual fish. Most people have never seen one.

    #19

    Two dolphins jumping out of calm ocean water with splashes during a bright sunny day showing ocean life. A lot of folks think if you see a dolphin you’re safe from sharks, because they dislike each other. But it’s a myth. They feed on the same fish, so if one is in the area, the other is like to be as well.

    Guess who saw a dolphin fin pop out of a wave next to them after learning this fun fact on the way to a morning surf?

    Also, if you almost drown by getting whomped by an entire set of waves twice as big as anything you’ve been in the water for, and end up chilling on the beach to recover after being dragged across the bottom of the ocean in water well over your head, only knowing which way to fight towards the surface because of the tether pulling you straight into the next wave ready to throw a board a few feet too long right at your head, a sea lion might just come by and sit next to you, and it is way more frightening to be next to one of those than it sounds. Especially while sitting down, unsure of what happens if you try to get up and don’t have the energy to run.

    Megabyte_Messiah , Jonas Von Werne/unsplash Report

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    #20

    Im a dive instructor so i know a bit about the ocean. Of all things ocean, the only thing that I find extremely errie, is how phucking dark it is. The real wild ocean is so dark you cant even see your hand. If you fell off a cliff without a flashlight, if you fell off a massive cargo ship, or oil rig, you're 100% dead. 0% chance of survival. If you had a chance, you have less than 10 minutes.

    deliriousfoodie Report

    #21

    Ghost Ships: Vessels are occasionally found perfectly intact with no sign of crew, a phenomenon reported even in recent years.

    MundanePause2983 Report

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    #22

    It's the second least explored major geological feature.

    reddituseronebillion Report

    #23

    The city of Thonis-Heracleion was discovered in 2000, after going missing for 1,200 years, having vanished overnight.

    At the end of the last Ice Age, sea levels rose by about 120 metres. We have found thousands of human settlements. Rising sea levels is real. It has already happened and will continue to happen.

    anon Report

    Jesse
    Community Member
    15 minutes ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    The Netherlands will persist

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    #24

    When a whale dies, it will (eventually) sink to the bottom of the ocean. Given the lack of nutrients >1000 m below the surface, these whale carcasses (known as "whale falls") become their own little ecosystem sustaining life for decades at a time.

    WorldlinessThat2984 Report

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    #25

    It’s 95% unexplored… which is ocean-speak for “probably haunted, probably angry, and definitely judging your floaties.”.

    Itsme_Audreyy Report

    #26

    There are parts of the Pacific Ocean which are antipodal to other parts of the Pacific Ocean.

    In other words, if you were to drill a hole through the seafloor there, and travel all 12,742 kilometres through the Earth, you would end up… at the seafloor of the same ocean, on the literal opposite side of the globe.

    britishmetric144 Report

    David Paterson
    Community Member
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Wait, really? It could be, its east-west width is only a small fraction short of half the Earth's circumference.

    #27

    At the bottom of the Mariana Trench (Challenger Deep), the pressure is over 1,000 times greater than at sea level, equivalent to 155 times the pressure of a car tire.

    ThePasswordIs654321 Report

    Fred
    Community Member
    35 minutes ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Car tyres inflated to 6.5 bar? I don't believe it.

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    #28

    The Pacific Ocean is huge. 

    - 4.5-5 moons could be lined up in order to equal its widest point

    - it has an average depth of 4,000 meters; its deepest point can hide Mt Everest and still maintain this average depth because of the room to spare that would still tower over Everest’s peak 

    - about 20% of the Pacific Ocean’s total depth is beyond habitation for most animals, excluding certain crustaceans, starfish, etc but almost no fish (except for the Snailfish, which can live in the Mariana’s Trench)

    - all seven continents could be hidden inside of its near-64 million square miles of surface area

    - the Pacific Ocean’s ecosystems account for over 70% of marine life, and sources 47 million tons (58% of all fish caught) a year via its fisheries.

    SL1Fun Report

    #29

    A massive, hidden reservoir of water three times the size of all surface oceans combined exists roughly 400 to 700 kilometers (250–400 miles) deep within Earth's mantle.

    Vimes-NW Report

    David Paterson
    Community Member
    1 hour ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    A massive hidden reservoir of water about the size of all Earth's oceans combined exists on Pluto. What's your point?

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    #30

    There are more Hydrogen atoms in a molecule of ocean water than there are stars in the solar system.

    Other-Comfortable-64 Report

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    #31

    The ocean is so deep that most of it is a permanent "midnight zone" where the pressure would crush you like a soda can. There are underwater lakes with their own shorelines and toxic waves, and we have better maps of Mars than our own sea floor. We aren't just exploring a planet; we're haunting a graveyard of things that haven't been discovered yet.

    Cookiemaw Report

    #32

    Wreckage of an abandoned plane on a desolate beach, evoking creepy facts about the ocean depths and mysteries. There are more planes in the ocean than submarines in the sky.

    HeroProtagonist4 , Giacomo Bianchi/unsplash Report

    Bored Jellyfish
    Community Member
    Premium
    5 hours ago (edited) Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Everybody drink each time you see a stupid statistic.

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    #34

    A single litre of sea water contains in the region of 10-100 billion (yes billion) individual viruses.

    wonkeyknees Report

    Bored Jellyfish
    Community Member
    Premium
    4 hours ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Unnecessary fear mongering again. Not all bacteria and viruses are bad. The human body has around 37 TRILLION bacteria cells and ten times as many virus particles. [Source: BBC Science Focus Magazine]

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    #35

    It's a massive, and I mean massive, carbon sink. 


    And it's getting full.


    As someone who lives on land and breathes air, I can't think of a single fact about the ocean that's more terrifying.

    Tutorbin76 Report

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    #36

    There are salt brine pool under the ocean. Highly toxic area that kills a lot of underwater creatures except for a few adapted species.

    Harith_Pendragon_ Report

    #37

    Fishing trawlers disappearing in OK weather that were possibly dragged down by submarines snagging their nets.

    gdabull Report