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Deep sea explorer Don Walsh, part of 2-man crew to first reach deepest point of ocean, dies at 92

Navy Lt. Don Walsh is photographed on Jan. 23, 1960. Walsh, an explorer who in 1960 was part of a two-man crew that made the first voyage to the deepest part of the ocean — to the “snuff-colored ooze” at the bottom of the Mariana Trench — has died. He was 92. Walsh died Sunday at his home in Myrtle Point, Ore., his daughter, Elizabeth Walsh, said Monday, Nov. 20. Associated Press File Photo

Retired Navy Capt. Don Walsh, an explorer who in 1960 was part of a two-man crew that made the first voyage to the deepest part of the ocean — to the “snuff-colored ooze” at the bottom of the Pacific’s Mariana Trench — has died. He was 92.

Walsh died Nov. 12 at his home in Myrtle Point, Ore., his daughter, Elizabeth Walsh, said Monday.

In January 1960, Walsh, then a U.S. Navy lieutenant, and Swiss engineer Jacques Piccard were sealed inside a 150-ton, steel-hulled bathyscaphe named the Trieste to attempt to dive nearly 7 miles below the surface. A bathyscaphe is a self-propelled submersible used in deep-sea dives.

The two men descended to 35,800 feet in the Challenger Deep, the deepest point of the Earth’s oceans, part of the Mariana Trench, about 200 miles off Guam in the Pacific.

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