Researchers have observed a record for the world's deepest living fish, found at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, the deepest site on earth.

The new species was recorded at a depth of 8,145 meters (26,722 feet), breaking the previous depth record, set in 2008, by nearly 500 meters (1,640 feet), researchers said in a statement.

"This really deep fish did not look like anything we had seen before, nor does it look like anything we know of," Alan Jamieson from the University of Aberdeen said. "It is unbelievably fragile, with large wing-like fins and a head resembling a cartoon dog."

Watch it appear out of the bottom-left corner in the animation here:

The Mariana Trench sits nearly 11,000 meters (7 miles) below sea level in the Pacific Ocean, where very few large animals are found. It's too cold and dark for most. However, new robotic technology is allowing researchers to explore the relatively barren environment, long thought too harsh for any life to exist.

The footage was captured by a team of Scottish scientists from the University of Aberdeen during their 30-day expedition using the Hadal-Lander ocean vehicle.

Along with the new species of snailfish, researchers filmed several other rarely seen creatures. That includes so-called supergiant amphipods, crustaceans that can measure a foot or more in length and are often referred to as the "insects of the sea."

A compilation of images shows different fish at great ocean depths in the Mariana Trench. The bottom-right image is a snaspshot of the deepest-living fish ever filmed. University of Aberdeen

The video footage below shows sea creatures at different depths. Larger animals, like rat-tails and cusk eels, live in shallower depths of 5,000 to 6,500 meters (16,404 to 21,325 feet). Supergiant amphipods live at mid-depths of 6,500 to 8,000 meters (21,325 to 26,246 feet).

The newly found, fragile snailfish lives at depths greater than 8,000 meters. It's shown in the video at about the 1:40-minute mark, swimming in from the bottom-left corner.

In 2012, director James Cameron became the first person to visit the bottom of the trench in more than 50 years. A year later, scientists published research indicating that the trench is thriving with microbes that are able to survive on the remains of dead animals, algae, and other microbes that float down the trench slopes.



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