A World of Cruel Ice Cave Exploration
image text translation
(1)Today’s star will be Jill Heinerth
(2)He was one of the first to map a 3D underwater cave
(3)She is the first female diver to explore the Antarctic cave
(4)He’s also shot National Geographic BBC documentaries several times and is a veteran who would have worked as an explorer 200 years ago
(5)As with underwater divers, he’s been through a lot of near-death crises
(6)dealing with one of those cases
(7)The largest iceberg ever fell off Antarctica in 2000
(8)Scientists named it B-15
(9)This B-15 is the largest iceberg ever observed
(10)It’s big
(11)Just a little bigger than Jamaica. I told you
(12)Anyway, global warming and whatnot is not to be covered in this article
(13)in one’s own way
(14)If there’s an iceberg as big as Jamaica, of course there’s an underwater cave inside
(15)It was not Jill Heinerth to ignore this
(16)I ran to B-15 right away and started diving
(17)A picture taken by diving into a real B-15 iceberg
(18)Of course, it’s not that diving cat. Even in Antarctica, if it’s iceberg diving, it’s bette
(19)A dangerous veteran who can die in a moment’s time is also a task
(20)Diving with my colleague Paul, Jill, the extreme cold and pain ice
(21)When I eat cream, my head breaks. I feel like I’m sleeping
(22)Into the cracks in the iceberg
(23)It’s like a palm tree that lives on the mountain eating Aesal plankton
(24)When I was immersed in diving while filming these creatures
(25)a crackling sound from the deep sea
(26)The two of them were terrified, and the sound stopped, but they went back to the ship, and then
(27)Eber had run out of money after his expedition
(28)But there was a problem
(29)The iceberg had disappeared from the entrance that had collapsed
(30)But Jill was a skilled veteran
(31)Don’t panic, calm down, find another narrow passage, and go towards Paul
(32)Escape together
(33)The two of them were able to get back to the ship safely, and the incident on the first day
(34)If you’re a normal person, you’ll melt in real-time and fall into nothing, like Jamaica
(35)I’m not going to dive into the ice cave in the mountains again
(36)Our veteran diver and professional documentary photographer, Jill, stop
(37)No way
(38)Jill trying to dive on the second day
(39)This time, three people, including Wes, Paul and Jill, tried to dive
(40)The three of us were diving smoothly, and suddenly something strange happened
(41)come into being
(42)There was an incredibly strong current in the cave
(43)All three of them were swept away by the current
(44)If you put your hand in the crack of the mountain and tried hard not to get sucked into the iceberg cave
(45)The three people who felt extreme fear in the crisis of death
(46)You find the faint blue light at the end
(47)You get in there and you barely escape the iceberg
(48)They were moving away from Rodl, but the ship was also pushed by a strong current and diverted
(49)The ship barely survived in search of them by shouting at the strength of its breast
(50)This is what happened on day two
(51)If you were going to search in a normal sequence, you’d go home and sleep with a blanket over you, but if you were a human, you’d be two days
(52)I watched it all
(53)Our veteran Jill doesn’t let go of expectations either
(54)Jill and colleagues who started diving on day three
(55)This time, we went underwater on the same course as the 2nd day
(56)be equally swept away by the current of the sea
(57)Jill and colleagues determined to escape
(58)What they found was a huge wall of underwater ice
(59)This was a space created by the vertical separation of glaciers
(60)In this space, there’s a strong ocean current from top to bottom
(61)It’s a very difficult situation to get on the reverse course
(62)To hold the wall, hold it because the wall itself is submerged in the water
(63)Jill and colleagues are screwed!
(64)But our Jill was a scholar who studied the creatures in the iceberg
(65)Jill, who came up with the ecology of fish living in ice
(66)The fish come up with a hole in their hideout
(67)Soon after, the holes were found in the ice walls
(68)Jill and colleagues slowly climbing up the hole by hand
(69)Maybe it’s because of luck, but let’s all escape safely without any deaths
(70)And to go back to diving, I’m taking a break and eating
(71)Dawn Jill and the researchers
(72)But they soon hear a tremendous roar
(73)The B-15 was breaking with a tremendous noise
(74)The cave they had dived in the morning was disappearing
(75)Eventually they cancel their afternoon dive plans and go back
(76)Jill, who passed the risk of dying for three days
(77)Don’t dive for the rest of your life
(78)But he’s still active as a diver
(79)It’s not even a book that goes into the ice
(80)Anyway, if you’re very lucky, you’ll survive whatever you do