Did You Know The World’s Largest Waterfall Is Underwater?

0
655

Did You Know The World’s Largest Waterfall Is Underwater?

Did you know the world’s largest waterfall is underwater? Us neither – every day’s a school day as they say. The tallest waterfall on Earth stands at a massive 3.5 kilometers (2.2 miles), next to which Angel Falls, the tallest uninterrupted waterfall over land, pales in comparison. So, where is this underwater behemoth?

The rest of this article is behind a paywall. Please sign in or subscribe to access the full content.

Where is the world’s largest waterfall?

The tallest waterfall is called the Denmark Strait cataract and can be found beneath the Denmark Strait between Greenland and Iceland. 

Here, water falls from the Greenland Sea into the Irminger Sea for over 3 kilometers, a drop that is more than three times the height of Venzuela’s iconic Angel Falls. 

The waterfall is also incredibly wide, spanning 160 kilometers (100 miles) and it plunges around 5 million cubic meters (175 million cubic feet) of water every second – that’s almost 2,000 Niagaras at peak flow.

Nestled deep below the ocean’s surface, the cataract was discovered in 1989.

But… how?

We know you’re probably wondering how an underwater waterfall comes to be – after all, how does water “fall” underwater? 

According to the National Ocean Service, it’s all to do with the water’s temperature. Cold water is denser than warm water, and so when the frosty, southward-flowing water from the Nordic Seas meets the more balmy water of the Irminger Sea, it sinks. The colder, denser water is forced below the warmer water, flowing over a colossal drop in the sea floor to create a beast of a waterfall.

Unfortunately, global warming is no friend of an underwater waterfall. As climate change continues to ramp up, the oceans are getting warmer and there’s a greater influx of freshwater, as well as less sea-ice formation, all of which results in a reduction in the volume of cold, dense water flowing downwards.

“A good example is on the Catalan coast, where the decrease in the number of tramontane days in winter in the Gulf of Lion and north of the Catalan coast is causing a weakening of this oceanographic process, which is decisive in regulating the climate and has a great impact on deep ecosystems,” Professor Anna Sanchez-Vidal, who is leading an expedition to investigate the Denmark Strait cataract, said in a statement.

Here’s hoping the world’s largest waterfall fares better.

Fancy ogling some more underwater marvels? Look no further than Thor’s Well, the drainpipe of the Pacific”.

An earlier version of this article was published in 2023.

Suche
Kategorien
Mehr lesen
Food
SPICED APPLE COBBLER
SPICED APPLE COBBLER ❤️WHY WE LOVE THIS RECIPE We love a good apple dessert...
Von Test Blogger1 2025-10-23 14:00:11 0 637
Spiele
FF14 director Yoshida is ready to fix the MMO's difficulty problem, starting now
FF14 director Yoshida is ready to fix the MMO's difficulty problem, starting now As an Amazon...
Von Test Blogger6 2025-08-24 15:00:14 0 1KB
Technology
Score the best deals on security cameras and doorbells this Prime Day
Best Prime Day deals on security cameras and doorbells...
Von Test Blogger7 2025-07-09 12:00:19 0 2KB
Food
The Sweet Texas Roadhouse Dessert Trick You Won't Find On The Menu
The Sweet Texas Roadhouse Dessert Trick You Won't Find On The Menu...
Von Test Blogger1 2025-10-06 11:00:07 0 849
Spiele
Grimdark roguelike Knock on the Coffin Lid just got even harder
Grimdark roguelike Knock on the Coffin Lid just got even harder As an Amazon Associate, we...
Von Test Blogger6 2025-07-08 12:00:17 0 2KB