What is it with those weird metrics?
147,000 square feet across, this is what science communication picks up from the paper?
The major axis of the TJBH at ~10 mbsl was estimated to be ~151.8 m and was oriented ~10.76° clockwise from the north, similar to the main direction of geological faults in the region. The minor axis, perpendicular to the major axis, was ~124.4 m across. The surface area covered by the blue hole is ~13,690 m2 (1.4 ha) with an external perimeter of ~492.7 m. The structure of the blue hole can be described as a conic shape that is north-skewed with a volume of ~1 million m3.
The conversion from square meters to square feet is 13690 * 3.28 * 3.28 = 147282.496, so at least it's the correct number for area. But yeah, adding "across" sounds weird there.
Edit: Actually for a much easier visual, it's right about 2.5 American football fields.
"Tim Newcomb is a journalist based in the Pacific Northwest. He covers stadiums, sneakers, gear, infrastructure, and more for a variety of publications, including Popular Mechanics."
Worth pointing out, the image in the article is actually of the 'Great Blue Hole' off the coast of Belize, which is about twice the diameter but half the depth[1] of the one in the paper.
Also quite the opposite of 'recently discovered'; it has been one of the best known diving spots in the world for over 50 years, and one of the very few ocean floor features that I can recognize by eye...
What is it with articles like these still using language like "discovered"
> Guided by tips from fishermen, scientists from Colegio de le Frontera Sur explored a tropical estuary off the southeastern coast
> the scientists names their new discovery the Taam ja' Blue Hole, using the Mayan language phrase
Clearly the locals have known about this already. If your argument is that the difference is when it's published in some scientific paper then that's also contradictory to:
> the new blue hole was discovered in 2021, the researchers only recently detailed their findings in a study published in Frontiers in Marine Science
"Discovered in 2021" pretty obviously means Western people here. If it was about "scientific description" then we would've said 2023.
It reminds me of that one white person that traveled to Mexico and "discovered" a variety of corn that produces a mucus-like goo that traps nitrogen from the air itself instead of using bacteria. This variety had an indigenous name and the people who've been growing it for thousands of years could trace back their entire lineage of people who've developed the variety specifically to grow in those low-nitrogen conditions
Yeah talking about discovery is weird. The title even says it "just showed up" making me think there was a geologic events involved.
Though I wouldn't dismiss any relevance of the year 2021, as that was when the scientists did their field work. Imagine another team did study the same hole in 2022 but published earlier, then that would be relevant.
> Clearly the locals have known about this already
Clearly they knew there was a small patch of deep water. Maybe not much more than that. I think you're being way too quick to jump to self righteousness
>Discovered in 2021" pretty obviously means Western people here. If it was about "scientific description" then we would've said 2023.
If the meaning is clear what seems to be the problem? It seems like manufactured outrage to be upset by this. I just discovered fuente avocados last week. I'm not claiming to be the first human to ever behold them.
As a thought experiment, can a secret never be discovered?
On the facts of the story, it seems highly unlikely that the locals knew that it was the second deepest blue hole on the planet.
What makes blue holes so fascinating, in my opinion, is the historical perspective they provide.
These were once deep air-filled vertical shafts, formed by the longterm erosional/dissolutional power of falling water under the influence of gravity. Speleothems like stalactites prove that they formed in an air-filled environment.
In other words, the present-day sea level at the Yucatan Peninsula was formerly at least 275m lower; and/or the present-day surface was at least 275m higher. The paper attributes this to "glacio-eustatic changes", which is the equal-and-opposite-reaction involving lowered sea level (increased global glaciation) and the buoyant rising of the regional continental crust since the mass of additional sea water has been removed.
> Our knowledge of blue holes is limited by accessibility issues, sometimes due to opening being too small or the depths being so great, and sometimes due to limited oxygen in the water, making it dangerous to explore without specialized equipment.
I'm curious why lack of oxygen is a problem? We don't breathe water, so why should oxygen content matter?
Not sure if it's the case here but typically a low o2 underwater environment means a high concentration of Hydrogen Sulfide. This can have corrosive effects on some scuba gear and generally makes visibility very poor. I've crossed through a H2S layer in a Mexican Cenote (fresh water on top, H2S in middle, Salt on bottom) it was only a few feet thick, it's not something I'd want to spend a lot of time in though. Even though you are on SCUBA you can still smell and taste it and it's not pleasant.
At first I assumed this was the one near Belize, which is quite well known in the scuba diving community [1]. In fact, the picture on this post is probably of that one. However, this new one is over twice as deep!
mxfh|2 years ago
The major axis of the TJBH at ~10 mbsl was estimated to be ~151.8 m and was oriented ~10.76° clockwise from the north, similar to the main direction of geological faults in the region. The minor axis, perpendicular to the major axis, was ~124.4 m across. The surface area covered by the blue hole is ~13,690 m2 (1.4 ha) with an external perimeter of ~492.7 m. The structure of the blue hole can be described as a conic shape that is north-skewed with a volume of ~1 million m3.
Why not about 140m (450 ft) diameter?
The full open access article is here:
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmars.2023.1141...
Izkata|2 years ago
Edit: Actually for a much easier visual, it's right about 2.5 American football fields.
havefunbesafe|2 years ago
Could be why.
osamagirl69|2 years ago
Also quite the opposite of 'recently discovered'; it has been one of the best known diving spots in the world for over 50 years, and one of the very few ocean floor features that I can recognize by eye...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Blue_Hole
unknown|2 years ago
[deleted]
culi|2 years ago
> Guided by tips from fishermen, scientists from Colegio de le Frontera Sur explored a tropical estuary off the southeastern coast
> the scientists names their new discovery the Taam ja' Blue Hole, using the Mayan language phrase
Clearly the locals have known about this already. If your argument is that the difference is when it's published in some scientific paper then that's also contradictory to:
> the new blue hole was discovered in 2021, the researchers only recently detailed their findings in a study published in Frontiers in Marine Science
"Discovered in 2021" pretty obviously means Western people here. If it was about "scientific description" then we would've said 2023.
It reminds me of that one white person that traveled to Mexico and "discovered" a variety of corn that produces a mucus-like goo that traps nitrogen from the air itself instead of using bacteria. This variety had an indigenous name and the people who've been growing it for thousands of years could trace back their entire lineage of people who've developed the variety specifically to grow in those low-nitrogen conditions
red_trumpet|2 years ago
Though I wouldn't dismiss any relevance of the year 2021, as that was when the scientists did their field work. Imagine another team did study the same hole in 2022 but published earlier, then that would be relevant.
driggs|2 years ago
The Mayans knew that it was a blue hole. They didn't know that it was among the deepest known in the world, simply that it was one of many blue holes.
biorach|2 years ago
Clearly they knew there was a small patch of deep water. Maybe not much more than that. I think you're being way too quick to jump to self righteousness
s1artibartfast|2 years ago
If the meaning is clear what seems to be the problem? It seems like manufactured outrage to be upset by this. I just discovered fuente avocados last week. I'm not claiming to be the first human to ever behold them.
As a thought experiment, can a secret never be discovered?
On the facts of the story, it seems highly unlikely that the locals knew that it was the second deepest blue hole on the planet.
ortusdux|2 years ago
https://explorersweb.com/taam-ja-blue-hole-mexico/
bandibus|2 years ago
driggs|2 years ago
These were once deep air-filled vertical shafts, formed by the longterm erosional/dissolutional power of falling water under the influence of gravity. Speleothems like stalactites prove that they formed in an air-filled environment.
In other words, the present-day sea level at the Yucatan Peninsula was formerly at least 275m lower; and/or the present-day surface was at least 275m higher. The paper attributes this to "glacio-eustatic changes", which is the equal-and-opposite-reaction involving lowered sea level (increased global glaciation) and the buoyant rising of the regional continental crust since the mass of additional sea water has been removed.
zwieback|2 years ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blautopf
Rayleigh scattering on nanoscale limestone particles!
hamandcheese|2 years ago
I'm curious why lack of oxygen is a problem? We don't breathe water, so why should oxygen content matter?
hkchad|2 years ago
nradov|2 years ago
beembeem|2 years ago
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Blue_Hole
unknown|2 years ago
[deleted]
unknown|2 years ago
[deleted]
aaron695|2 years ago
Easier to see on Google Earth on a less windy day. Search "Taam Ja’ Blue Hole"
JohnClark1337|2 years ago
[deleted]
thinkling|2 years ago