Select Page
Sixty-five years ago today—January 23, 1960—two brave explorers dared to go where no person had gone before: to the deepest point of the Earth’s oceans. Swiss engineer and oceanographer Jacques Piccard and U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh (pictured above; Piccard is on the right) guided the bathyscaphe Trieste to the portion of the Marianas Trench known as the Challenger Deep—nearly 7 miles below the surface of the Pacific Ocean.

Not only did the two hydronauts risk instant death from the 18,000 pounds per square inch of water pressure all around them, they endured many hours of damp, bone-chilling cold sitting in a tiny metal pressure sphere suspended under the Trieste‘s hull. They were completely cut off from the rest of the world during most of their slow descent—their sonar/hydrophone voice communication system had inexplicably failed early in their voyage.

There was an especially tense moment when they realized a viewing port in the steel tube that connected their pressure sphere to the hull had cracked. If the tube filled with water, they would be forced to stay in the cramped sphere for four days with almost no food while their support tug towed them back through heavy seas to Guam. Fortunately, the cracked window wasn’t a significant issue.

This is interesting, and indeed an historic event, you might be thinking. You may also be thinking, Why is this event the subject of a blog post on the web site for two science-fiction novels that have nothing to do with exploring the Earth’s oceans in general or the Trieste’s dive to the Challenger Deep in particular?

Actually, there is a connection between my upcoming novel, The Loss of What is Past, and the extraordinary voyage of Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh 65 years ago. “What is that connection?” you ask. Well … you’ll need to read the book to find that out.  😉

Meanwhile, if you’d like to learn more about Piccard, Walsh, and the Trieste, here are a few sources. The book by Norman Polmar and Lee Mathers includes a very detailed account of the historic first dive to the bottom of the Challenger Deep.

(Image courtesy of U.S. NAVAL INSTITUTE)

Author

  • David Backman

    David Backman is a native Minne-snow-tan, naturalized Texan, and lifelong sci-fi lover. He lived most of his life in the Twin Cities and retired in 2023 from a 44-year IT career to focus on writing and volunteering. The Loss of What is Past is the sequel to his award-winning debut novel, The Lightning in the Collied Night.

    View all posts