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Volvo Ocean Race Leg 7: Eight facts about Point Nemo

by Jonno Turner 25 Mar 2018 22:43 PDT 26 March 2018
Leg 7 from Auckland to Itajai, day 08 on board MAPFRE, passing Point Nemo, Blair Tuke holding the signal, Xabi steering and Tamara at the back 25 March, © Ugo Fonolla / Volvo Ocean Race

Impress the your closest mates, the astronauts, with your knowledge of the world's hardest-to-reach place.

The Volvo Ocean Race boats are racing past an iconic point – Point Nemo, the world's most lonely place – on Leg 7, and here's everything you need to know about the place which is regarded the hardest-to-reach location on planet Earth.

You can't actually see it. That's because 'Point' Nemo isn't actually a bit of land. It's an invisible spot in the vast Southern Ocean furthest from land, in any direction. Other poles of inaccessibility include the Eurasian Pole, in China, or the Southern Pole of Inaccessibility in Antarctica – a very difficult place to visit.

It's pretty far from anywhere else. 2,688km away in every direction, to be precise. Either in the Pitcairn Islands, Moto Nui in the Easter Islands, and Maher Island in Antarctica. If you've got to decide, we're going to suggest heading for the Easter Islands – Ducie Island is a non-inhabited stretch of rock about 2km long, and Antarctica is, well, Antarctica.

It's only officially 25 years old. Point Nemo didn't technically exist until 1992 – or if it did, we didn't realise it. A Croatian-Canadian survey engineer Hrvoje Lukatela used a geo-spatial computer program to figure it out. SPOILER ALERT: He didn't even go there, using technology to calculate the exact location. He realised that since the earth was three-dimensional, the most remote ocean point must be equidistant from three different coast lines.

Point Nemo is a source of excitement for scientists. In the 90s, a mysterious noise was picked up less than 1,250 miles east of Point Nemo. The sound, dubbed "the Bloop", was louder than a blue whale – leading to speculation that it was made by some unknown sea monster – and had oceanographers all worked up. After much trepidation, NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) worked out that it was the sound of a giant iceberg fracturing and cracking.

It isn't named after a fish. It's moniker is a tribute to Captain Nemo from Jules Verne's '20,000 Leagues Under The Sea' – and the Latin translation of 'Nemo' actually means 'no man', a fitting name for a spot so lonely. When the boats passed Point Nemo they were closer to astronauts on the space station than to other humans on Planet Earth.

There are rumours that it's a space junk cemetery. With no-one around, it's the perfect place to discard of old rockets and satellites. Over 100 decommission space craft are thought to lie in the area.

Volvo Ocean Race is leading groundbreaking scientific exploration in the area. No-one goes to Point Nemo – I mean, why would you? – but in 2017-18 the Volvo Ocean Race boats will be collecting samples as part of the Science Programme, funded by Volvo Cars. The boats are dropping drifter buoys at specific locations around Point Nemo, which will collect key metrics for scientists around the globe. Two teams – Turn the Tide on Plastic and team AkzoNobel – are gathering microplastic data to contribute to an ongoing study which aims to provide an ocean health snapshot based on samples collected along the race track.

You can go there, if that's your thing – just don't expect a gift shop. Just punch these digits into your GPS [45º52.6S, 123º23.6W] and start sailing – and remember, once you're there, you've got just as far to go to get back to land. Don't forget to wave hello to the guys in space!

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