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Hincapiej4

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Pistondog

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My initial thought was, no way the coral skeletons on the bottom can support that, but maybe corals are neutral weight in nsw.
Nature is metal.
 
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Hincapiej4

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My initial thought was, no way the coral skeletons on the bottom can support that, but maybe corals are neutral weight in nsw.
Nature is metal.

I used to spend hours watching submarine dives in the ocean before I got a tank. It's so interesting, wish I could live forever so I could explore the ocean :( wish I had become a marine biologist and had a chance to be out there
 

Pistondog

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I used to spend hours watching submarine dives in the ocean before I got a tank. It's so interesting, wish I could live forever so I could explore the ocean :( wish I had become a marine biologist and had a chance to be out there
Perspective for inhospitable environments:
Space is a near vacuum, the max delta pressure that spacecraft must withstand is 1 atmosphere, 14.5 psi, inside craft vs outside
In the ocean, every 33 feet, the pressure increases 1 atmosphere.
At 330 feet, 10x
At the bottom of that reef, 50x or 700 lbs per square inch.

At one time more men had been to the moon than to the Marianas trench, the deepest spot in the oceans.
Mind boggling pressures.
 

Pistondog

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Perspective for inhospitable environments:
Space is a near vacuum, the max delta pressure that spacecraft must withstand is 1 atmosphere, 14.5 psi, inside craft vs outside
In the ocean, every 33 feet, the pressure increases 1 atmosphere.
At 330 feet, 10x
At the bottom of that reef, 50x or 700 lbs per square inch.

At one time more men had been to the moon than to the Marianas trench, the deepest spot in the oceans.
Mind boggling pressures.
Just looked it up, Marianas trench, 36000 feet deep.
36000/33 = 1050 atmospheres
14.5 psi × 1050 = 15000 lbs per square inch.
For the portholes, would that be 12mm or 10 mm glass?
 

Just grow it: Have you ever added CO2 to your reef tank?

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