Nemo Point, officially known as the inaccessible ocean pole, is the farthest place on the earth's surface from the land, located on the sea surface of 48 52.6' s123 23.6' w in the center of the South Pacific, and the nearest land mass is 2688 kilometers away from the local area. This site is isolated from land, ship routes and ocean currents, and there are almost no traces of human activities and other creatures in the sea area.
Environment:
Because Nemo point is sandwiched in the middle of the sea surrounded by the South Pacific circulation, it prevents the inflow of nutrient-rich and low-temperature external seawater, and the land mass is far away from the local area, which also shows that this point lacks organic matter washed into the sea on land.
It is also impossible to form marine snow to maintain the deep-sea ecosystem. The above factors make the marine environment around Nemo point not enough to support a large number of organisms, but some submarine bacteria can survive on the deep-sea hot springs of the nearby East Pacific seamount.