The video discusses a list of 10 unusual discoveries made in the ocean.
1. **A Lost City**: An underwater city in the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, was rediscovered by archaeologists. The city, once a bustling metropolis, was flooded and sank, and was forgotten until it was rediscovered. It is believed to have been built around its grand temple and was crisscrossed with a network of canals.
2. **A Giant Eyeball**: A giant eyeball washed up on a beach in South Florida. The eyeball was likely taken out by a fisherman and washed up on the beach. It's not a sea monster, but a swordfish's eye.
3. **An Undersea River**: Scuba divers located a secret underwater river called Cenote Angelita in the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. The river is formed due to a thick layer of hydrogen sulfide where freshwater and salt water meet.
4. **Giant Oarfish**: The giant oarfish is a mysterious inhabitant of deep waters. It can grow longer than a school bus and has shiny silver skin with long red pelvic fins and a long red dorsal fin.
5. **Frilled Shark**: Frilled sharks are fascinating creatures that live in the dark depths of the ocean. They have a jagged dinosaur-like appearance with slender bodies that can coil and contort in a serpentine way.
6. **Underwater Sculpture**: The Granada Underwater Sculpture Park in the Caribbean has over 75 life-size sculptures. The sculptures range from whimsical figures to more poetic installations.
7. **Ancient Pills**: Archaeologists found a tin container with well-preserved pills dating back to about 140 to 130 BC off the coast of Italy. The tablets may have been used for an eye wash.
8. **Jason Voorhees Underwater Statue**: A life-size statue of Jason Voorhees, one of Hollywood's most infamous killers, was created and dumped into the bottom of Crystal Lake in northern Minnesota.
9. **Vampire Squid**: Known scientifically as Vampiro thesis infernalis, this deep-sea creature gets its name not because it sucks blood, but because of its blood-red coloration, cloak-like webbing, and toothy-looking spines.
10. **Giant Knife**: A massive underwater knife was supposedly found by a team of professional scuba divers in 2014. The image of the knife held by three divers has been widely circulated across social network sites and scuba diving forums.
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1. The text discusses the exploration of the ocean's depths, revealing stunning discoveries such as treasure, hidden cities, and valuable things.
2. The ocean covers seventy percent of the earth's surface, with only less than five percent currently explored.
3. The text mentions a lost city, once a bustling metropolis, that was flooded and sank until archaeologists rediscovered it.
4. The city of Heracleon, visited by Paris and Helen of Troy, was built around its grand temple and was home to small sanctuaries and homes.
5. The city of Heracleon was shrouded in myth and thought to be a legend.
6. The city of Heracleon was lost for nearly 1200 years before being rediscovered.
7. The city of Heracleon was crisscrossed with a network of canals, a kind of ancient Egyptian Venice.
8. The city of Heracleon was largely obscured, and no one is quite sure how it ended up entirely underwater.
9. In October 2012, a giant disembodied eyeball washed up on a South Florida beach.
10. The eyeball was probably taken out by a fisherman who threw it out into the water and it washed up on the beach.
11. The eyeball was not a sea monster, but an eyeball from an average-sized swordfish.
12. Scuba divers located a secret underwater river called Cenote Angelita in the Yucatan Peninsula in Mexico.
13. The river is formed due to a thick layer of hydrogen sulfide at a point where freshwater and salt water came to be trapped in the cave.
14. The river appears perfectly normal from the surface but becomes strange and wispy as you dive down about 30 meters.
15. The river is hauntingly beautiful and offers scuba diving trips to Angelita.
16. The giant oarfish, a inhabitant of deep waters, can grow longer than a school bus and has shiny silver skin with long red or like pelvic fins.
17. The oarfish is regarded as omens of natural disasters in Japan.
18. The frilled shark is a fascinating and yet terrifying creature that lives in the dark depths of the ocean.
19. Fruit sharks are claimed to have been living in the ocean for 80 million years.
20. The granada underwater sculpture park, designed by artist Jason Dakares Taylor in 2006, has been listed as one of National Geographic's 25 wonders of the world.
21. The park has over 75 life-size sculptures installed underwater, ranging from whimsical figures to more poetic installations.
22. The park was created to build an artificial barrier where the coral and other marine life could migrate to and find a new home.
23. Archaeologists investigating an ancient shipwreck off the coast of Tuscany stumbled upon a rare find of well-preserved pills dating back to about 140 to 130 BC.
24. The pills were made of a zinc-based composition that included iron oxide, starch, beeswax, pine resin, a mix of animal and vegetable fats, flax fiber, coal grains, and pollens.
25. The statue of Jason Voorhees, one of Hollywood's most infamous killers, was created and dumped into the bottom of Crystal Lake in northern Minnesota.
26. The statue is complete with his iconic hockey mask and machete and has been sitting there ever since.
27. The Vampiro thesis infernalis, or vampire squid from hell, is a deep-sea creature that lives in the nearly complete dark waters of the mesopelagic zone.
28. When disturbed, the vampire squid inverts its cape and squirts a copious cloud of sticky bioluminescent mucus towards would-be predators.
29. The vampire squid from hell refuses to kill and satisfies its appetite with plankton and the rotting remains of dead fish.
30. A massive underwater knife was supposedly found by a team of professional scuba divers in 2014.
31. The image of the knife held by three