complete the story since childhood,deven was deeply interested in the sea and it's profound mysteries so it wasn't surprising that he became a deep sea diver when he grew up driving into the sea and watching the marine animals in their pristine habit was very fascinating one day....
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Explanation:
In 2012, film-maker and ocean explorer James Cameron descended 11km (7 miles) to the bottom of the Mariana Trench in the Pacific Ocean. Though he was not the first to reach this impressive depth, his name was added to the Guinness book of world records alongside US Navy Lt Don Walsh and Swiss oceanographer Jacques Piccard who first ventured there in 1960.
Cameron’s descent marked a resurgence in interest in the depths, particularly the Mariana Trench – the birthplace of many devastating earthquakes and home to Challenger Deep, the deepest part of all the world’s oceans. Thanks to increasingly advanced submersible vehicles and cameras, scientists are discovering more about our planet and the creatures living here.
The video footage from Cameron’s mission revealed there was indeed life at the very bottom of the ocean in the shape of wood-eating crustaceans, camouflaged sea cucumbers and single-celled lifeforms that catch food in their sticky filaments. Yet these creatures have never been seen outside of this pitch-dark environment where they are perfectly adapted to the harsh conditions. So, not all species familiar with the depths can be described as divers.
During this intensive period of exploration, there has also been plenty of competition to find the deepest living fish. In 2014, researchers from the University of Hawaii, US, and the University of Aberdeen, UK, teamed up to use an innovative lander to record video footage in the Mariana Trench. At 8,145m (26,722 ft) a pale pink snailfish was attracted to their bait and welcomed into the record books.