But, using certain wavelengths of sound, echoes were received from depths between 1,000 and 1,500 feet, whereas the sea itself was known to be two or three miles deep at these places. The only plausible explanation was that there were vast multitudes of floating or swimming objects of some sort, constituting almost a solid surface, at the depths from which the echoes came. The mystery was increased by the fact that the false bottom existed only during daylight. The carpet was laid shortly after sunrise and rolled up at twilight. The indication was that the echo-producing objects rose to the surface at the beginning of darkness—a clue which has given rise to much speculation and argument.
The carpet is under all the oceans, even the nethermost Antarctic. In some areas it seems practically continuous over thousands of square miles. In others it is broken up into smaller areas, like scatter rugs on a floor.
The false bottom is almost as much a mystery today as when it first puzzled the Navy’s navigators. All are agreed that it must be composed of vast hordes of animals. They are not directly observable by any known technique. Some indication of their size and abundance, however, can be deduced from the wave lengths of sound which they echo. There must be, it has been calculated, from ten to twenty of these organisms in each cubic meter of water. They echo only long sound waves. High frequency sound passes through them like light through glass and is bounced back from the true sea bottom. They have been a mild nuisance, but never a peril, to modern navigators.
Whatever the organisms may be, they evidently cannot endure any light. At dawn they sink immediately from within about 100 feet of the surface through the zone of moonlight-pale, green illumination which represents sunshine’s deepest penetration of sea water.
Chief proponents of the theory that a preponderance of them are squid are oceanographers of the Navy’s Hydrographic Office. It is well established that the deep sea abounds in these fantastic mollusks. They rarely are seen at the surface. They move through the water very rapidly by a kind of jet propulsion, gulping water in the mouth and shooting it out explosively from the rear. They are little affected by changes in hydrostatic pressure, as are fish with air bladders. When the false bottom rises at sunset it comes to the surface at a rate of forty to fifty feet a minute. No swimming fish, it is maintained, could rise so rapidly through the decreasing pressure. It would get the “bends”, like a human diver brought to the surface in too great a hurry.
These squid range in length from three or four inches to more than a foot. They are of about the right size to return some of the echoes which have been observed. The faintly luminous euphasid shrimps also are known to be very abundant in the depths. Presumably they provide most of the squids' food.
The principal investigations have been carried out by the Navy’s Electronics Laboratory and the Scripps Institute of Oceanography of San Diego. An outstanding difficulty hitherto has been that the echoes have been known only from the false bottom as a whole. They have covered a wide spectrum of sound wavelengths. A recently developed technique is to lower a hydrophone connected with a sound-producing mechanism into the depths in order to record echoes from individual objects at distances of a few feet. Indications to date are that some of them are from a foot to eighteen inches long—too large to be squid and far too large to be shrimp. They can only, it is deduced, be deep water fish. If a great number of fairly large fish are indicated, this false bottom might turn out to be the richest pasture in the ocean for the production of food for man.
Navy divers have swum through the false bottom at night when it was within less than 200 feet of the surface. They have observed enormous numbers of euphasids and other small organisms—but very few fish. This, however, is only suggestive. There is no good reason to believe the carpet has the same texture at night as by day. It is quite likely that the organisms disperse widely over the surface waters.
Snakes That Act and Look Like Worms
There are snakes that look like snarls of six-inch-long pieces of wrapping twine. These worm snakes are the world’s closest imitators of worms. Among the most secretive of living things, they rarely come in contact with man. When they are seen they usually are mistaken for worms. Only zoologists can put them in their true families. These living strings live exclusively under the earth, sometimes in tangled snarls of scores of individuals.