#GAReads | First American woman to walk in space now first woman to reach deepest point of ocean

Astronaut Kathryn D. Sullivan, 41-G mission specialist, uses binoculars  for a magnified viewing of earth through the forward cabin windows (1984).

Astronaut Kathryn D. Sullivan, 41-G mission specialist, uses binoculars for a magnified viewing of earth through the forward cabin windows (1984).

First American woman to walk in space now first woman to reach deepest point of ocean”:

Kathy Sullivan, America’s first female spacewalker, also became the first woman to reach the deepest known point of the ocean.

Sullivan dove to the bottom of the Challenger Deep and safely returned in her submersible vessel on Monday, according to EYOS Expeditions, the company that operated her expedition. She is now the eighth person to reach the depth, the lowest point in the Marianas Trench, which is about 35,853 feet under the Western Pacific Ocean surface.

A call was made between Sullivan’s vessel at the bottom of the ocean and astronauts aboard the International Space Station. The call was an homage to Sullivan’s other historic adventure, when she became the first American woman to walk in space in 1984.

Read Doha Madani’s full article at NBC News here…