18 THE BOUNDING MAIN
gecions.
But ttle bat ended to do. On t dive, inJune 1930 in ton and Beebe set a o 600 feet. By1934, to 3,028 feet, ay until after ton to a dept, train on every bolt andrivet any dept 3,000 feet, ttle ported to nineteen tons of pressure persquare inc sucantaneous, as Beebe never failed toobserve in icles, and radio broadcasts. t training to o a metal ball and tons of steel cable,o t, nothem.
ts didn’t produce deal of hwhile science.
Altered many creatures t been seen before, ts ofvisibility and t t neitrepid aquanauts rained oceanograpten able to describe tail t real scientistscraved. t carry an external ligt bulb to t ter beloically impenetrable anyo it tz, so anyto vieerested in t. About all t, inconsequence, t of strange tartled to spy a giant serpent “more ty feet long and very passed too sly to be more tever it s were generally ignored byacademics.
After t of 1934, Beebe lost interest in diving and moved on tootures, but Barton persevered. to , Beebe alold anyone on erprise, but Barton seemed unable to step fromtoo, e ts of ter adventures and even starredin a itans of turing a batingand largely fictionalized encounters squid and tised Camel cigarettes (“t give me jittery nerves”). In 1948 , o 4,500 feet in ttermined to overlook itans of tually t tar of ton is lucky to get a mention.
At all events, to be compreeam fromSzerland, Auguste and Jacques Piccard, ”). Cened trieste, after talian city in , tly, t did little more t go up